Total Solar Eclipse 2024

Complete coverage of the total solar eclipse that will cross the United States on April 8, 2024.

Complete coverage of the total solar eclipse that will cross the United States on April 8, 2024.

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Highlights

  1. The Eclipse Across North America

    What people in the path of totality were seeing and saying as the eclipse unfolded across the continent.

     By

    CreditRenaud Philippe for The New York Times
  2. See the Total Solar Eclipse’s Shadow From Space

    An American weather satellite is capturing the movement of the moon’s shadow across North America during the total eclipse of the sun on Monday.

     By K.K. Rebecca Lai and

    CreditThe New York Times
  1. Did You Really Need to Be There to See the Eclipse?

    For much of the 20th century, Rochester, N.Y., was the “imaging capital of the world.” For three and a half minutes on Monday, it was living up to its old nickname.

     By Christopher Valentine and

    Credit
    Audience Report
  2. See Maps of Where Eclipse Seekers Flocked and the Traffic That Followed

    Movement data shows which towns were destinations for the eclipse and how travelers caused hourslong delays on roads near the path of totality.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times
  3. Someday, Earth Will Have a Final Total Solar Eclipse

    The moon will drift far enough from Earth that it no longer fully obstructs the sun. But predicting when this will happen poses numerous challenges.

     By

    CreditRichie Pope
  4. A Divided America Agrees on One Thing: The Eclipse Was Awesome

    The solar eclipse helped unite America — or at least a very narrow band of it.

     By

    Spectators eagerly awaited the solar eclipse during Eclipse Fest at Buffalo State University on Monday.
    CreditJalen Wright for The New York Times
  5. What Solar Eclipse-Gazing Has Looked Like for the Past 2 Centuries

    Millions of people on Monday will continue the tradition of experiencing and capturing solar eclipses, a pursuit that has spawned a lot of unusual gear.

     By

    Viewing the total eclipse on July 9, 1945, in New York City.
    CreditThe New York Times

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