Guía de visibilidad de eclipses y astronomía
Experience the Totality
From the "Ring of Fire" to the elusive Total Solar Eclipse, track the most breathtaking celestial events. Our high-precision engine calculates local contact times, obscuration percentages, and path visibility for your exact location.
Local Visibility Schedules
Understanding Eclipse Visibility
Unlike lunar eclipses which are visible to an entire hemisphere, solar eclipses are only visible along a narrow path. Whether you are in the Path of Totality or seeing a Partial Eclipse depends entirely on your geographical coordinates.
The visibility of an eclipse is measured by its magnitude (the fraction of the Sun's diameter covered by the Moon) and obscuration (the fraction of the Sun's area covered). Our city-specific pages provide the exact second the moon touches the sun's disk (C1) and the moment of maximum coverage. Even a 99% partial eclipse is significantly different from 100% totality, where the solar corona becomes visible to the naked eye.