Watch live: Total solar eclipse moves across the US

5 months ago 7

(NEXSTAR) – After months of anticipation, a total solar eclipse will darken skies over the United States on Monday, April 8, and the awe-inspiring phenomenon will stream live in the player above once it starts.

Whether you only have a partial view or clouds are in the forecast, you can still enjoy a live look from the path of totality, as captured by Nexstar's stations.

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As the eclipse moves first over Mexico, then the United States and Canada, the moon will pass squarely between Earth and the sun, leaving a roughly 115-mile path of shadow. For those in the path, the sky will darken as it would normally during dawn or dusk.

When will it be visible?

The total solar eclipse will enter the U.S. in Texas, with the partial eclipse beginning just after noon local time. Next up will be Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.

A sliver of both Tennessee and Michigan is also projected to be in the path of totality.

Here are the partial and total eclipse timings for several cities in the path:

PlacePartial BeginsTotality BeginsMaximumDuration
Austin, Texas12:17:14 PM CDT1:36:12 PM CDT1:37:02 PM CDT1 min, 40.3 secs
Idabel, Oklahoma12:28:14 PM CDT1:45:23 PM CDT1:47:33 PM CDT4 mins, 18.4 secs
Little Rock, Arkansas12:33:33 PM CDT1:51:38 PM CDT1:52:51 PM CDT2 mins, 26.6 secs
Poplar Bluff, Missouri12:39:44 PM CDT1:56:21 PM CDT1:58:25 PM CDT4 mins, 7.8 secs
Carbondale, Illinois12:43:01 PM CDT1:59:17 PM CDT2:01:21 PM CDT 4 mins, 8.3 secs
Paducah, Kentucky12:43:00 PM CDT2:00:50 PM CDT2:01:36 PM CDT1 mins, 31.1 secs
Indianapolis, Indiana1:50:34 PM EDT3:06:04 PM EDT3:07:59 PM EDT3 mins, 49.4 secs
Cleveland, Ohio1:59:22 PM EDT3:13:46 PM EDT3:15:40 PM EDT3 mins, 48.9 secs
Erie, Pennsylvania2:02:26 PM EDT3:16:23 PM EDT3:18:14 PM EDT3 mins, 41.8 secs
Syracuse, New York2:09:02 PM EDT3:23:05 PM EDT3:23:47 PM EDT1 mins, 24.5 secs
Montpelier, Vermont2:15:00 PM EDT3:27:39 PM EDT3:28:27 PM EDT1 mins, 35.4 secs

An extra special eclipse

All total solar eclipses aren’t the same, and this year’s is setting up to be especially phenomenal, NASA says.

“The eclipse in 2024 could be even more exciting due to differences in the path, timing, and scientific research,” NASA wrote on its website.

During this year’s solar eclipse, the moon will be closer to Earth than it was during the 2017 event, further obscuring the sun’s rays and creating a wider path of totality.

Eclipse offers views of every planet in solar system … if the weather cooperates

Thanks to the larger path across the U.S. and the route the eclipse will take over more densely populated areas, roughly 31.6 million people are in the path of totality this year, compared to 12 million during the last total solar eclipse.

According to NASA, 99% of people living in the U.S. will get the chance to see at least a partial view of the eclipse. For those in the path, totality will also last longer this year, with some locations seeing over four minutes of darkness.

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Finally, there's the sun's activity, which is coming at a perfect time.

In 2017, solar activity was at a minimum, but this year, eclipse viewers will get an additional treat as the sun becomes more active with possible “streamers flowing in to the solar atmosphere” from behind the moon’s shadow, according to NASA.

How to watch and capture the eclipse safely

“In addition to that, viewers will have a better chance to see prominences – which appear as bright, pink curls or loops coming off the Sun,” NASA stated. “With lucky timing, there could even be a chance to see a coronal mass ejection – a large eruption of solar material – during the eclipse.”

As the eclipse progresses across the United States on Monday, you can find live updates, videos and images below.

Article From: pix11.com
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