An annular solar eclipse will create a rare “ring of fire” phenomenon visible in parts of South America on Wednesday.
A “ring of fire” occurs when the Moon lines up between the Sun and the Earth to create a solar eclipse, but does not block out the Sun’s light entirely, Diego Hernandez with the Buenos Aires Planetarium told AFP.
On Wednesday, the Moon “will be a little farther from the Earth than usual, which happens about once a month,” he said, meaning it will not be able to completely cover the Sun.
A “crescent sun” will be visible before and after the ring, as the Moon passes in front of the Sun, he added.
The solar eclipse’s path will begin in the North Pacific, pass over the Andes and Patagonia regions of Latin America, and finish in the Atlantic.
The eclipse will last more than three hours, from 1700 to around 2030 GMT, according to Nasa.
But the “ring of fire” phenomenon is expected to last just a few minutes, occurring around 1845 GMT, according to the IMCCE institute of France’s Paris Observatory.
A partial eclipse will be visible from Bolivia, Peru, Paraguay, Uruguay, parts of Brazil, Mexico, New Zealand and several islands in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, Nasa said.
Space agencies and institutes have warned against observing an eclipse with the naked eye, saying it can cause irreversible damage to the retina. Ordinary sunglasses offer insufficient protection.
The only safe methods, according to Nasa and the IMCEE, are using certified special eclipse glasses, or watching indirectly through a pinhole in a cardboard sheet projecting the image of the eclipsed Sun onto a second cardboard sheet.
The next partial solar eclipse will take place on March 29, 2025, visible mainly from western North America, Europe and northwest Africa.
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