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The Great 2027 Total Solar Eclipse

The Great Solar Eclipse

August 2, 2027

Witness the Longest Total Solar Eclipse Over Land This Century

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What is a Total Solar Eclipse?

A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes directly between the Sun and Earth, completely blocking the face of the Sun. For a few brief, spectacular minutes, the sky darkens as if it were dawn or dusk, allowing the Sun's ethereal outer atmosphere—the corona—to become visible.

This rare alignment is a cosmic coincidence: the Sun is about 400 times larger than the Moon, but it is also about 400 times farther away, making them appear the same size in our sky.

SUN
MOON
EARTH

Path of Totality

The 2027 eclipse will carve a path across southern Spain, the Strait of Gibraltar, North Africa, and the Middle East. The chart below shows the approximate duration of totality for several key locations along this path.

Spotlight: Luxor, Egypt

The premier viewing location for this event is Luxor, Egypt. Not only does it boast fantastic weather prospects, but it will also experience the longest duration of totality over land: a staggering 6 minutes and 23 seconds.

Imagine standing amidst ancient temples and the Valley of the Kings as the sun vanishes in the middle of the day, revealing the solar corona in the Egyptian sky. It's a once-in-a-lifetime conjunction of history and celestial mechanics.

Maximum Totality Duration

6m 23s

Near Luxor, Egypt

Eclipse by the Numbers

6m 23s

Max Duration

Longest over land in 21st century

258 km

Max Path Width

The width of the Moon's shadow

1.079

Magnitude

How much larger the Moon appears than the Sun

Phases of the Eclipse

A total solar eclipse unfolds in several distinct, breathtaking stages. Here’s what to look for:

First Contact

The Moon begins to touch the edge of the Sun. The partial eclipse begins.

Baily's Beads & Diamond Ring

Just before totality, sunlight streams through lunar valleys, creating points of light. The last bead of light creates the stunning "Diamond Ring" effect.

Totality

The Sun is completely hidden. The sky goes dark, the corona is visible, and the temperature drops. This is the main event.

Third Contact

The Diamond Ring and Baily's Beads appear on the opposite side as the Moon begins to move away.

Fourth Contact

The Moon completely leaves the Sun's disk. The eclipse is over.

How to Watch Safely

WARNING: Never look directly at the Sun without certified eye protection, except during the brief phase of totality.

What to Use

  • Certified eclipse glasses (ISO 12312-2 standard)
  • Solar viewers or binoculars/telescopes with certified solar filters
  • Pinhole projectors for indirect viewing

What NOT to Use

  • Regular sunglasses (no matter how dark)
  • Smoked glass, undeveloped film, or CDs
  • Unfiltered cameras, binoculars, or telescopes

Prepare yourself for an unforgettable celestial event.