A partial solar eclipse will stun in the sky this Saturday. Here's how and where you'll be able to see it.
Skygazers will be treated to yet another celestial event, just weeks after a total lunar eclipse created a dazzling blood moon in the night sky. A partial solar eclipse will create a unique-looking sunrise on Saturday, March 29, but it will only be visible in the Northeastern U.S., eastern Canada, western Africa and Europe.
Every year, there are two to five solar eclipses that can occur of any type — partial, annular, total or hybrid — but an important factor is where it can be visible from Earth.
Specifically in the U.S., the partial solar eclipse will be seen to some degree from Washington, D.C., and 13 states: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia.
Lucky viewers only in northeastern Maine, and southwestern New Brunswick and eastern Quebec, in Canada, will also be able to see a “double sunrise.” This happens when the silhouette of the moon makes the rising sun look like two “horns” coming out of the horizon.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/a-partial-solar-eclipse-will-stun-in-the-sky-this-saturday-heres-how-and-where-youll-be-able-to-see-it-175619959.html
Wonder if TSF will stare at it again.