Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
An annular eclipse
Sunday’s annular eclipse coincides with northern hemisphere’s summer solstice, when Earth’s north pole is tilted most directly toward the sun. Photograph: Ferdinandh Cabrera/AFP via Getty Images
Sunday’s annular eclipse coincides with northern hemisphere’s summer solstice, when Earth’s north pole is tilted most directly toward the sun. Photograph: Ferdinandh Cabrera/AFP via Getty Images

Rare 'ring of fire' annular solar eclipse to cast shadow over Africa and Asia

This article is more than 3 years old

Event will be visible across a narrow band from Congo-Brazzaville to southern China

Skywatchers along a narrow band from west Africa to the Arabian peninsula, India and southern China will witness the most dramatic “ring of fire” solar eclipse in years on Sunday.

Annular eclipses occur when the moon passes between Earth and the sun, but not quite close enough to our planet to completely obscure the sun’s light.

They occur every year or two, and can only been seen from a narrow pathway across the planet.

Sunday’s eclipse coincide’s with the northern hemisphere’s longest day of the year, the summer solstice, when Earth’s north pole is tilted most directly toward the sun.

The eclipse will be seen first just a few minutes after sunrise in north-eastern Congo-Brazzaville. This is the point of maximum duration, with the blackout lasting 1 minute and 22 seconds.

It will reach “maximum eclipse”, with a perfect solar halo around the moon, over Uttarakhand near India’s border with China just after midday. The exact alignment will only last for 38 seconds.

“The annular eclipse is visible from about 2% of the Earth’s surface,” Florent Delefie, an astronomer and the Paris Observatory, said. “It’s a bit like switching from a 500-watt to a 30-watt light bulb.”

People hundreds of kilometres on either side of the centreline across 14 countries will also see light drain from the day, but not the “ring of fire”.

“Good weather is the key to successful eclipse viewing,” the astrophysicist Fred Espenak writes on the Nasa Eclipse website. “Better to see a shorter eclipse from clear sky than a longer eclipse under clouds.”

There will be a second solar eclipse in 2020 over South America on 14 December, but because the moon will be a bit closer to Earth it will block on the sun’s light entirely. It will take less than 100 minutes to move across the continent.

Even if the day has darkened, looking at a solar eclipse with the naked eye is dangerous. “The sun is so bright that even when there’s only a tiny portion visible, it is still dangerous for the eyes,” Delefie said.

This article was amended on 22 June 2020 to remove a reference to the use of sunglasses when looking at eclipses.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Partial eclipse of sun by the moon takes place over UK

  • Solar eclipse 2021: UK skygazers enjoy view of crescent sun

  • The solar eclipse in Asia, Africa and the Middle East – in pictures

  • 'Worth everything': America takes in total solar eclipse from coast to coast

  • Total solar eclipse captivates America – as it happened

  • Portland in the spotlight: flood of people expected for the Great American Eclipse

  • What kind of eclipse are you likely to see? Let our visualizations show you

  • 'Most spectacular thing I’ve ever seen in my life': US readies for total eclipse

Most viewed

Most viewed