Solar eclipse on Friday will be made available on the internet in the NASA’s solar eclipse website.
A total solar eclipse will darken some of the earth’s skies on Friday, but geography, weather , the economy and even the Olympics are combining to make it hard and expensive for those eager to chase it.
Next year’s total solar eclipse – July 22, 2009- will be more southern and last the longest of the 21st century: six minutes and 39 seconds. But it will be during the monsoon season and can be seen, if the weather cooperates, over India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, china and the Pacific Ocean.
This eclipse can be seen in mostly remote places: the northeastern edge of Canada, the tip of Greenland, parts of Russia, china and Mongolia, including the Gobi desert.
The solar eclipse on Friday at its peak will last for 2 minutes and 27 seconds.
Peoples who cannot be in the place to watch eclipse will be shown live NASA’s solar eclipse website is at http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/Semono/TSE2008/TSE2008.html.
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