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Total Solar Eclipse Will Cross U.S. on April 8

NASA has announced that a total solar eclipse will be visible on April 8th, and the spectacle will be awe-inspiring for Americans across the country.

As the total solar eclipse moves along its path, it will cross North America and pass through Mexico, the United States, and Canada. announced Recently on the website.

“The total solar eclipse will begin in the South Pacific Ocean. Weather permitting, the first total solar eclipse to occur on the North American continent will be the Pacific coast of Mexico at approximately 11:07 a.m. PDT,” NASA continued.

The eclipse’s path will continue from Mexico and enter the United States from Texas to Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Pass through the state. Parts of Tennessee and Michigan will also experience a total solar eclipse. The eclipse will enter Canada from southern Ontario and pass through Quebec, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton Island. The eclipse will leave the North American continent on the Atlantic coast of Newfoundland, Canada, at 5:16 p.m. (NDT).

Delta Air Lines had an interesting idea to offer travel from Austin, Texas to Detroit for a chance for travelers to take part in the path of a total solar eclipse, when the moon’s shadow covers the sun, UPI reported Tuesday. Reported.

“Solar eclipses are a rare phenomenon in America. Only three have passed through the bottom 48 states in the past 100 years: in 2017, 1979, and 1918,” the newspaper said.

Video footage from 2017 show Americans enjoy a total solar eclipse while wearing special eye protection.

“This is something I’ve been dreaming about and thinking about for the rest of my life,” one woman told CBS Mornings.

Breitbart News reported that the eclipse revealed the sun’s corona, and that scientists continue to study the solar corona within minutes of totality.

“Thus, while religious traditions suggest that solar eclipses may be bad omens, it is also true that at times of greatest darkness the most profound light can emerge. “It is in those moments, however brief, that the deepest insights into God’s creation may be explored,” writes the outlet’s Joel B. Pollack.

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