
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/42463208/144927698.0.0.jpg)
Just like the recent lunar eclipse on May 26, if you want to see this eclipse, you're going to need to wake up pretty early. Poke a hole in paper or a card and hold it extended in your arms with your back to the sun, projecting it at either the ground or toward another card set up about a metre away. If you don't have eclipse glasses, you can make a pinhole projector. WATCH | How to safely watch a solar eclipse Check them for scratches or holes, and if you find any, throw them away. You risk damaging your eyes with even the slightest flaws.

Instead, ensure you have adequate eye protection, such as solar eclipse glasses (new window), which you may have picked up during the 2017 eclipse. While solar eclipses are beautiful to see, it's important that you never look directly at the sun during these events - even if only part of it is covered, as it can cause severe eye damage. This map notes the times of maximum eclipse for Canadian cities.

The reason we get these types of eclipses is due to an odd coincidence of nature: The sun is 400 times larger than the moon - but the moon is also 400 times closer to us. Every so often, the moon is able to completely cover the face of the sun. And once in a while, it just barely does so when it is at apogee, or the farthest from Earth in its monthly orbit.

A partial eclipse is where the moon appears to swing through some of the sun.Īn annular eclipse, however, is when the moon is a little farther away from us in its orbit and covers all but the outer edge of the sun, creating what some call a ring of fire. During a total eclipse, the entire disk of the sun is covered by the moon. There are three main types of solar eclipses: total, partial and annular. On Thursday, parts of the Northern Hemisphere - including Canada - will experience an annular solar eclipse, an event where most of the sun is blocked out by the moon. READ MORE: 7 astronomical events you don’t want to miss in 2015īut while most total eclipses last for about an hour, this one is extremely short - just four minutes and 43 seconds.Just two weeks after the total lunar eclipse, there's another celestial event on the horizon - but this time involving the sun. The first eclipse was April 15, 2014, followed by one on Oct. The eclipse is the third in a tetrad - a series of four total lunar eclipses in a row. TORONTO - The first lunar eclipse of the year takes place on Saturday and, once again, Canada is in a great place to catch it. WATCH ABOVE: On Saturday morning, Apnot long before sunrise eastern time, the bright full moon over North America turned a lovely shade of celestial red during a total lunar eclipse. Send this page to someone via email email.
