Partial Solar Eclipse on Mon, 14 November 2050 – Path & Viewing Guide
Global Eclipse Path
Local Eclipse Conditions at
Sun and Moon relative positions.
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Observation Parameters
Time | |
Latitude | 39.9625 |
Longitude | -83.0061 |
Eclipse Phase | |
Magnitude | |
Coverage | |
Umbra Size, km | |
Penumbra Size, km | |
Distance to Shadow Center, km |
Sun and Moon Positions
Sun | Moon | |
---|---|---|
RA/Dec | ||
Elevation | ||
Azimuth | ||
Angular Diameter | ||
Distance, km |
Global Eclipse Parameters
Phase | Time | Duration | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Partial | Global | 07:18 | 11:44 | 4 hours 26 minutes | ||||||
Local | 08:18 | 08:22 | 4 minutes | |||||||
Total | Global | - | - | - | ||||||
Local | - | - | - |
Global Eclipse Conditions
The partial solar eclipse on Mon, 14 November 2050 will begin at 07:18, reach its peak at 09:31, and end at 11:44. At maximum eclipse, up to 84% of the Sun’s disk will be obscured, depending on the observer's location.Local Eclipse Conditions
At your location (39.963, -83.006), the eclipse will begin at 08:18, reach its peak at 08:18, and end at 08:22. The Sun will be 1% covered at maximum eclipse, offering a spectacular celestial event.Data Credits
We would like to express our gratitude to NASA for providing valuable eclipse data through the NASA Eclipse Website and NASA JPL Horizons.
Special thanks to all the astronomers, researchers, and space agencies whose work enables precise eclipse predictions and observations.