Overview
- Totality will last about 58–59 minutes, with Eastern Time totality from 6:03 to 7:02 a.m. and peak darkness around 6:33 a.m., though sunrise will cut into views for parts of the U.S. East Coast.
- NASA’s map shows totality visible from eastern Asia, Australia, the Pacific, and North and Central America, with partial views in central Asia and much of South America and no visibility in Africa or Europe.
- Most of India will see only the eclipse’s concluding stages at moonrise, though local listings indicate some Northeastern cities may catch totality; the event is safe to view with the naked eye.
- New Zealand is well placed to see the entire eclipse, with MetService noting generally settled conditions but a risk of overnight cloud; Australia’s east coast can view the full totality window, with city times around 10:04–11:02 p.m. local in Sydney and Melbourne.
- Global access is set via livestreams from Timeanddate.com (hosted by Graham Jones and Anne Buckle with the Starry Knights), Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, and the Virtual Telescope Project led by Gianluca Masi.