A 'ring of fire' solar eclipse glowed over Antarctica, witnessed by only a handful of researchers at Concordia Research ...
A 'ring of fire' eclipse is coming to Antarctica on Feb. 17.
Why do some places wait 1,000 years to see a total solar eclipse while others get two in a decade? The surprising orbital ...
NASA explains how a safely view a 'ring of fire' annular solar eclipse. WARNING: People should always use protective solar ...
August brings the second and final solar eclipse of the year.
Annular solar eclipse on February 17, 2026: exact times of partial phases and peak ring of fire, visibility areas, path of annularity, and upcoming eclipse dates.
From the prime viewing spot of Concordia Station in Antarctica, the ring was reportedly visible for about two minutes.
Learn why total solar eclipses occur irregularly at different locations on Earth, with intervals spanning centuries, based on NASA and Space.com data.
On Tuesday, Feb. 17 , the Earth will witness an annular solar eclipse — commonly called a ring of fire .
From 2026 to 2028, Earth will see a double eclipse cascade: three total solar eclipses and three annular solar eclipses.