Ring of eclipse to pass across Earth
This particular event is what's termed an annular eclipse. It will see the Moon move across the face of our star but not completely block out the light coming from it. Instead, there will be just a thin sliver of brilliance left to shine around the Sun's disc. The best of the action will be in the Arctic. Yes, not many people live there, but a good portion of the globe will still get treated to a partial eclipse where the Moon appears to take a big bite out of the Sun.
This will include the eastern United States and northern Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and parts of Europe and Asia. In the UK, the most favourable place to watch, in terms of the percentage of the Sun's disc that gets covered up, will be in Scotland -somewhere like Lerwick in the Shetland Islands (11:27 BST), or Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis (11:18 BST)These places will see about 40% of the Sun eclipsed.
But even down south, in London (11:13 BST), for example, 20% will cover over of the star. As ever, the advice is not to try to look at the Sun with the naked eye. This can do severe damage. Anyone gazing skyward should only do so with the aid of protective viewing equipment, such as approved eclipse glasses or a pinhole projector. Better still, attend an organised event. Local astronomy clubs will be out in force to show people how to view the eclipse safely.
There's some good advice here from and the Royal Astronomical Society. The so-called "path of annularity" - the track across the Earth's surface where the Moon sits entirely within the Sun's disc to give the greatest spectacle - begins at sunrise in Ontario, Canada, at 09:49 GMT (10:49 BST). It then sweeps across the top of the globe, including over the North Pole, to eventually reach Russia's Far East and lift off the planet at sunset at 11:33 GMT (12:33 BST).
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