Not exact matches
Then on August 21, 2017, experience 2 minutes and 40 seconds of totality
during the first North American total
solar eclipse in nearly 30 years — and the first
visible from the contiguous states since 1979.
When viewed
during a total
solar eclipse, the red rim of the chromosphere is just
visible to the naked eye.
This photo, taken
during a
solar eclipse, captures Baily's beads, a result of shafts of sunlight that just barely
visible past the edge of the moon.
Pictured: The very faint, upper level of the sun's atmosphere, called the corona, becomes
visible during a total
solar eclipse.