SUN Β· ECLIPSES Β· TOTAL
Total solar eclipse of Monday, August 2, 2027
The longest total solar eclipse until 2114 β over six minutes of totality near Luxor, Egypt. The path crosses southern Spain, the Maghreb, Libya and Egypt before continuing over the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa.
The numbers
Every figure here is published by Fred Espenak (NASA GSFC) for this specific eclipse β none of it is estimated by us. Times are Universal Time.
Greatest eclipse falls at 25.5Β°N, 33.2Β°E, where the Moon's shadow is 257.7 km wide and the Sun stands 81.7Β° above the horizon.
Provenance: NASA's decade table lists greatest eclipse at 10:07:49 TD. Terrestrial Dynamical Time runs ΞT = 71.7s ahead of Universal Time for this eclipse, giving the published instant of 10:06:37.7 UT β the value above. We quote UT, because UT is the time your clock keeps.
Where it lands
The central path β the only ground from which the total phase is visible β crosses:
Outside that band a partial eclipse is visible across a far wider area β NASA's canon records the region as βAfrica, Europe, Mid East, w & s Asiaβ.
The path is narrow and its edges matter: a few kilometres outside it means a deep partial instead of the real thing. For exact local contact times and the precise path edge, NASA's map for this eclipse is the authority.
What major cities see
βSun upβ is computed for each city at the instant of greatest eclipse β an eclipse below your horizon is no eclipse at all. For your own city: every city's eclipse page.
| City | Sees | Local time at greatest |
|---|---|---|
| Madrid | Central path | 12:07 PM |
| Cairo | Central path | 1:07 PM |
| London | Slight partial | 11:07 AM |
| Berlin | Slight partial | 12:07 PM |
| New York | Not visible | β |
| Los Angeles | Not visible | β |
| Mexico City | Not visible | β |
| SΓ£o Paulo | Not visible | β |
| Buenos Aires | Not visible | β |
| Rome | Not visible | β |
| Lagos | Not visible | β |
| Johannesburg | Not visible | β |
| Istanbul | Not visible | β |
| Dubai | Not visible | β |
| Delhi | Not visible | β |
| Tokyo | Not visible | β |
| Sydney | Not visible | β |
| Auckland | Not visible | β |
Watching it safely
The Sun is never safe to look at directly, and a partially eclipsed Sun is no safer than an ordinary one β there is simply less light to warn your eye with. Totality itself β and only totality, and only inside the narrow path β is safe to view unaided. Every moment either side of it is not. Use eclipse glasses certified to ISO 12312-2, or project the Sun onto card.
Next, and nearby
Eclipse predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA Goddard eclipse canon (Espenak & Meeus) (eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov), public domain. Circumstances for this eclipse come from its published path table and map. Per-city verdicts are computed by LiveEarthViewer from the canon's country lists and the Sun's real altitude at greatest eclipse β useful for planning, never a substitute for exact local contact times.