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.

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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 eclipse10:07 UT
Maximum totality6:23
Eclipse magnitude1.079
Path width257.7 km
Sun altitude at greatest81.7Β°
Saros series136

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 Ξ”T = 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:

SpainMoroccoAlgeriaTunisiaLibyaEgyptSudanSaudi ArabiaYemenSomalia

Outside that band a partial eclipse is visible across a far wider area β€” NASA's canon records the region as β€œAfrica, Europe, Mid East, w & s Asia”.

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

β€œSun up” 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.

CitySeesLocal time at greatest
MadridCentral path12:07 PM
CairoCentral path1:07 PM
LondonSlight partial11:07 AM
BerlinSlight partial12:07 PM
New YorkNot visibleβ€”
Los AngelesNot visibleβ€”
Mexico CityNot visibleβ€”
SΓ£o PauloNot visibleβ€”
Buenos AiresNot visibleβ€”
RomeNot visibleβ€”
LagosNot visibleβ€”
JohannesburgNot visibleβ€”
IstanbulNot visibleβ€”
DubaiNot visibleβ€”
DelhiNot visibleβ€”
TokyoNot visibleβ€”
SydneyNot visibleβ€”
AucklandNot visibleβ€”

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.