Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Rare Hybrid Solar Eclipse Over North America This Weekend: How to See It

By: By Sean Breslin
Published: October 29,2013
 
 
 
 
 
 

SAEED KHAN/AFP/Getty Images
A focused image onto a white background through a telescope shows the moon crossing in front of the sun as seen from the Sydney Observatory on May 10, 2013 in Australia.
The cosmos have saved a special treat for the final eclipse of 2013.
On Sunday, Nov. 3, a "hybrid" solar eclipse will be visible from the eastern coast of North America to Europe all the way to parts of Africa and the Middle East, according to an EarthSky.com report. The eclipse will begin over North America at sunrise and will move east through sunset on Sunday evening.
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This eclipse is known as a hybrid because it will start as an annular eclipse before the Moon's orbit gets close enough to Earth to become a total eclipse, reports Universe Today. Of the nearly 12,000 solar eclipses that have occurred since 1999 BC, fewer than five percent are hybrid eclipses, the report also states.
You can see an animated image of the eclipse's shadow below.
Hybrid Eclipse
Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
According to the Washington Post, Washington, D.C. residents can expect to see the annular eclipse begin at 6:38 a.m. and will last for about 30 minutes. Areas to the east can expect the eclipse to last a few more minutes, and they will see slightly more of the sun's area covered by the annular eclipse.
As for the solar eclipse, only the easternmost points of North America will briefly see it, which excludes all of the United States.
Also, remember to turn back your clocks on Saturday night with Daylight Saving Time ending early Sunday morning, before the eclipse begins, to ensure you don't miss the celestial event.
This will be 2013's fifth eclipse overall and the second solar eclipse of the year, Universe Today says.

MORE: Solar Eclipses as Seen From Space

NASA Photo

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