Phenomenon eclipse The sun will occur on Tuesday (10/25) tomorrow. However phenomenon this can only be seen by a number of countries in Europe, Africa and East Asia, not Indonesia.
The next eclipse will be the second and final partial eclipse of 2022. This phenomenon will occur at 4:58 a.m. EDT or 3:58 p.m. WIB when the moon begins to cross the Sun as seen from the North Atlantic Ocean.
The sun will move east over the next four hours, ending at 9:01 a.m. EDT in southern India, reports say. Universe today.
If you don’t live in the part of Earth where the solar eclipse is visible, you have the option to watch it online via the link here.
The solar eclipse will peak at 11:10 a.m. EDT or 10 p.m. WIB. The sun will appear 82% covered by the moon to observers near the North Pole.
For observers in Russia, about 80% of the Sun’s view will be covered, while in China, 70% of the Sun will be blocked. While in Finland less sun is visible, which is about 62 percent will appear blocked.
This partial solar eclipse phenomenon will coincide with the new phase of the Moon, which is when the Moon is on the same side of Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky.
Cited Spacethe solar eclipse phenomenon occurs when the moon and the sun align as the moon passes between the sun and the earth.
When the moon and sun are completely aligned, the sun appears to be completely blocked, creating a total solar eclipse, but a partial solar eclipse can occur when they are not perfectly aligned.
Because the Moon’s orbit around Earth is tilted relative to the Sun, the Moon and Sun do not align each month to create a solar eclipse.
Next year, the next eclipse phenomenon will occur twice, on April 20, 2023, followed again on October 14, 2023. However, next year some parts of Indonesia may witness the phenomenon.
According to the astronomical calendar, there will be a total solar eclipse on April 20, 2023, visible from the Exmouth Peninsula in Western Australia, Timor Leste and West Papua.
Almost all parts of Indonesia at this time will be able to witness the solar eclipse. Some areas on the path to totality will even experience a total solar eclipse (GMT).
(can/lth)