Tomorrow , the Sun , Moon , and Earth will fall together in near - sodding coalition , produce a partial solar occultation as the Moon passes in front of the Sun . It may not be as showy as a total occultation , but it ’s always fun to watch the Moon take a bite out of the Sun .

Partialeclipseshappen when , from peculiar screening points on Earth , the Moon is between us and our star and its saucer partially covers the Sun ’s . This means it wo n’t go completely dark but the light of our star will be blind .

It ’s the second partial solar occultation of 2022 , almost add an terminal to this year ’s eclipses ( next month ’s lunar occultation will fill up the year out ) and will take place tomorrow , Tuesday , October 25 .

You should have good views from across Asia , Africa , and Europe , and can find out when the eclipse and maximum point will be happening in your area thanks toTimeandDate’sinteractive maps . There are enough oflive streamstoo should you want to catch it without being in a premier viewing placement .

As ever , if you plan on view it live and in person , remember to stay good : use limited solar viewing or eclipse glasses if you want to face the Sun , or else practice an indirect reckon method like apinhole camera .

“ It is not safe to await right away at the Sun without specialized heart protective cover for solar viewing , ” cautionsNASA . “ Eclipse drinking glass are NOT steady dark glasses ; regular sunglasses , no matter how saturnine , are not dependable for regard the Sun . ”

There are between two and four eclipses a year , though the maximum that can happen in one calendar twelvemonth is five . fit in to NASA , that ’s pretty rarified though , with just 25 years out of the retiring 5,000 having five .

Solar and lunar eclipse always fare in duet – the solar occultation pass off either two week before or after the lunar eclipse . Next month ’s lunar eclipse on November 8 will be total , meaning Earth will add up between the Full Moon and the Sun , completely blocking the Sun ’s ray which normally light up the Moon . After that , we ’re look at April 2023 for an exciting full solar occultation .