The first solar eclipse of 2026 will occur on Tuesday, February 17. It will be an ‘annular solar eclipse’ and the world is eagerly awaiting the celestial event. Here’s all you need to know about it. A ...
People in India will not be able to witness solar eclipse on February 17. The first solar eclipse of 2026 is on Tuesday, February 17. People across the world are eagerly waiting for the annual ...
A “ring of fire” solar eclipse on Tuesday will mark the first eclipse of 2026, but only about 2% of the world’s population will get to see it, according to Time and Date. The event, also called an ...
The first and only total lunar eclipse in 2026 will occur March 3. Here's what most Florida residents will be able to see. A partial lunar eclipse will occur Aug. 27-28. March will bring the year's ...
Update implements Jakarta EE 11 platform and brings support for Jakarta Data repositories and virtual threads.
The next full moon of 2026 will be a rare celestial phenomena. The worm moon will rise as a dramatic fiery red blood moon amid a total lunar eclipse. The special March full moon is known as the worm ...
On August 2, 2027, the skies above parts of southern Spain, Northern Africa, the Middle East and the Horn of Africa will plunge into darkness as a total solar eclipse blocks all direct sunlight.
On Tuesday, February 17, an annular eclipse of the Sun will occur. Here’s the catch, though: It will only be visible as annular along a thin line in Antarctica. From the southern tips of Chile and ...
The Annular Solar Eclipse on February 17, 2026, will create a "Ring of Fire" but won't be visible in India. Sutak Kaal rules won't apply. The eclipse occurs in Aquarius and Dhanishtha Nakshatra. Next ...
The "Blood Moon" is pictured during an eclipse in the night sky over Sydney on September 8, 2025. Stargazers had a chance to see a "Blood Moon" on the night of September 7-8 during a total lunar ...
On Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, a dramatic annular solar eclipse — popularly known as a “ring of fire” — will appear in the skies above remote parts of Antarctica home to two scientific research stations.
New Moon occurs at 7:01 A.M. EST, bringing an annular solar eclipse to Antarctica and part of the Southern Ocean. Only travelers in these regions will see the Moon cover nearly all of the Sun’s disk, ...