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FIVE things to know about the RARE Hybrid Solar Eclipse TONIGHT [Video]

A hybrid solar eclipse is set to happen TONIGHT, and it’s going to be a special one. Here are five things you should know about the eclipse.

FIVE things to know about the RARE Hybrid Solar Eclipse TONIGHT Photos: Stock/Canva

By: Corné van Zyl

THE RARE HYBRID SOLAR ECLIPSE WILL HAPPEN TONIGHT

According to reports, for the first time in a decade, a hybrid solar eclipse is set to take place on April 20. 

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The moon will come in between the sun and Earth during the eclipse. The eclipse will appear as a total in some places but will appear as an annular eclipse in others. 

“This eclipse is a little bit tough because not much of it is going to pass over land…so most people that get a chance to see the eclipse are going to see a partial eclipse. What that means is that the moon is only going to block out part of the sun, so it will look like a bite is taken out of the sun.”

said Dr. Michael Kirk, the principal investigator of NASA’s Heliophysics Education Activation Team.

HERE ARE FIVE THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE ECLIPSE:

  • It is known as a hybrid solar eclipse when such an eclipse occurs. It is a combination of an annular and a total solar eclipse.
  • The duration of the hybrid eclipse is 199 minutes.
  • Maximum eclipse: At a maximum eclipse, the sun is 1.02657 percent covered by the moon, with an eclipse magnitude of 1.0132.
  • In a hybrid solar eclipse, if you are in the path of totality, you see either an annular solar eclipse or a total solar eclipse, depending on your position along the central eclipse path.
  • The next annular solar eclipse will take place in 2031.

IT IS A COMBINATION OF AN ANNULAR AND A TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE

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It starts as annular, becomes total and later goes back to being annular. 

HERE IS HOW, WHEN, AND WHERE YOU CAN WATCH THE ECLIPSE:

hybrid solar eclipse will be visible in Australia, Timor-Leste, and Indonesia (West Papua and Papua) on April 20, 2023. At the same time, a partial solar eclipse will be visible on April 20 in Southeast Asia, East Indies, Australia, the Philippines, and New Zealand. 

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According to Eclipse.com, South Africans will not be able to see the eclipse tonight with the naked eye. 

But wait, we have great news! You can watch it on the live stream below or on YouTube.

The partial eclipse beings at 1:34 UTC and ends at 6:59 UTC on April 20. The central (hybrid) eclipse begins at 2:37 UTC and ends at 5:56 UTC on April 20. Note that, for the Americas, this eclipse takes place mostly on the night of April 19 (so the eclipse isn’t visible in the Americas).

The greatest eclipse took place off the coast of Timor at 4:16:47 UTC on April 20. There will be 1 minute and 16 seconds of the total.

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The South African

The South African is an independent, impartial, and fact-driven online news platform. Visit TheSouthAfrican.com for all the latest news, sport, entertainment, and lifestyle stories from South Africa and around the world.

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