{ Thursday (Oct. 23) will be a “Solar Eclipse Day,” in nearly all North America, except for a portion of eastern Canada and a slice of eastern New England, will experience the partial solar eclipse this week.
Nearly all of People who live east of a line running from roughly Quebec City to Montauk Point, New York, will miss out on the solar show, since the sun will set before the dark disc of the moon begins to encroach upon it.
The several hundred thousand people who inhabit parts of Siberia will get a brief view around local sunrise time — but on Friday (Oct. 24), because this part of the eclipse visibility zone is to the west of the International Date Line. So, for this part of the world, the event will begin on the day after it ends! [Partial Solar Eclipse of October 2014: Visibility Maps]
Greatest eclipse, with more than four-fifths of the sun’s diameter covered by the moon, will occur over the Canadian Arctic at M’Clintock Channel, an arm of the Arctic Ocean, which divides Victoria Island from Prince of Wales Island in the territory of Nunavut.
The rest of North America will see less of the sun covered.
For much of Alaska, western and central Canada, the Pacific Northwest and the northern Plains, more than 60 percent of the sun’s diameter will be covered by the passing new moon. For the Southwest and central and southern Plains, the eclipse magnitude diminishes to between 40 and 60 percent. Across the Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi valleys, maximum eclipse will coincide with sunset, while farther to the east, the moon will only begin its encroachment onto the sun’s disc as it sets.
In the United States, more than half of the sun’s diameter will be covered north of a line extending from San Francisco to the Oklahoma panhandle. But this will occur in the mid- to late-afternoon hours — too late to dim the landscape abnormally. Some people might still attempt to record the gradual fading and recovery of the sunlight with sensitive photographic exposure meters. These can be set to view a light-colored wall that faces toward the Southwest.
Be careful!
Unlike a total eclipse of the sun, which concentrates viewing excitement into a few fleeting minutes, a partial solar eclipse can be watched without urgency.
View galleryPartial Solar Eclipse to Darken US Skies This Week
Viewers in Los Angeles, California, will see 31 percent of the sun covered, at 3:28 p.m. PDT.
Observations can be made with the naked eye, binoculars or telescopes of any size. Of course, eyes and instruments must be protected by special filters from the intense light and heat of the focused solar rays. Keep in mind that the sun is no less dangerous to look at during a partial eclipse than it is on a normal sunny day. Don’t be tempted to squint at the spectacle or steal unsafe glances just because part of the sun’s surface is blocked by the moon! [How to Safely Observe the Sun (Infographic)]
During the eclipse, drawings and photographs can be made to show the moon’s progress across the solar disc. If your camera is capable of taking multiple exposures through a wide-angle lens, the whole phenomenon might be captured on a composite scene, but a telephoto lens is necessary if you’re trying to bring out the jagged profile of the lunar limb. The moon may temporarily hide some sunspots.
At locations where sunset occurs before the end of partial eclipse, some unusual pictures might be obtained, especially if horizon conditions favor the occurrence of the atmospheric phenomenon known as the green flash on the sun’s upper rim.
But again, be careful! Only attempt such observations if you have the proper solar filters. If you don’t have them, don’t watch the eclipse directly, either with the naked eye or through binoculars or a telescope — serious and permanent eye damage will likely result.
{{Space News}}

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