Mar 9 – Mar 10, 2035 Annular Solar Eclipse
What the eclipse would look like near the max point
The animation shows approximately what the eclipse looks like near the maximum point of the eclipse (weather permitting).
Stages in eclipse
- Partial Eclipse just started
- Partial Eclipse in good progress
- Full Eclipse starts
- Maximum Eclipse
- Full Eclipse ends
- Partial Eclipse continues
- Partial Eclipse about to end
Click the 'play' button to view the animation. The pause button can also be used to temporarily suspend the animation.
The animation shows where this annular solar eclipse is visible (white, gray and red shading) as well as day and night (dark “wave” slowly moving across the Earth's surface).
The colors within the shaded area show how much of the Sun's disk the Moon covers during the eclipse. The dark center of the red area shows the best locations to view this eclipse. Here, the Moon moves centrally in front of the Sun without covering it entirely, leaving a bright “ring of fire” that is characteristic of an annular solar eclipse.
In the red area, the Sun is obscured 90 percent or more, in the dark gray area the Moon covers between 25 and 90 percent of the Sun's disk. The white shaded area symbolizes locations where less than 25 percent are covered.

The dark strip in the center indicates the best locations for viewing the eclipse. Here, the Moon moves centrally in front of the Sun.
The eclipse is also visible in the areas that are shaded red, but less of the Sun's disk is obscured. The fainter the red shading the less of the Sun's disk is covered during the eclipse.
Where to see the eclipse
Continents seeing at least a partial eclipse:
- Parts of Australia
- South in North America
- Pacific
- Indian Ocean
- Antarctica
Annular eclipse visible in...
Locations near the shadow's path:
Partial eclipse visible in...
- South Pole, Antarctica
- Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Launceston, Tasmania, Australia
- Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
- Greymouth, New Zealand
- Christchurch, New Zealand
- New Plymouth, New Zealand
- Blenheim, New Zealand
- Auckland, New Zealand
- Wellington, New Zealand
- Wanganui, New Zealand
- Palmerston North, New Zealand
- Taupo, New Zealand
- Tauranga, New Zealand
- Rotorua, New Zealand
- Napier, New Zealand
- Gisborne, New Zealand
- Chatham Islands, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
- Papeete, Tahiti, France
When the eclipse happens worldwide
The eclipse starts in one location and ends in another, the times below are for visibility for any location on earth.| Event | UTC Time | Time in Washington DC* |
|---|---|---|
| First location to see partial eclipse begin | Mar 9 at 8:21 PM | Mar 9 at 3:21 PM |
| First location to see full Eclipse begin | Mar 9 at 9:25 PM | Mar 9 at 4:25 PM |
| Maximum Eclipse | Mar 9 at 11:10 PM | Mar 9 at 6:10 PM |
| Last location to see full Eclipse end | Mar 10 at 12:45 AM | Mar 9 at 7:45 PM |
| Last location to see partial Eclipse end | Mar 10 at 1:49 AM | Mar 9 at 8:49 PM |
* Local times shown do not refer to when the eclipse can be observed from Washington DC. Instead, they indicate the times when the eclipse begins, is at its max, and ends, somewhere else on earth. The local times are useful if you want to view the eclipse via a live webcam See eclipses viewable in Washington DC.
Eclipses during year 2035
- Feb 22, 2035 Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
- Mar 9 – Mar 10, 2035 Annular Solar Eclipse (Currently shown)
- Aug 18 – Aug 19, 2035 Partial Lunar Eclipse
- Sep 1 – Sep 2, 2035 Total Solar Eclipse
Astronomy calculators
- Find Moonrise and Moonset for a location
- Moon Phase Calculator – Find moon phases for any year
- Find Sunrise and Sunset for a location
- Day and Night World Map – See which parts of the Earth are currently illuminated by the Sun
More information
Calendar tools
- Calendar for 2013
- Calendar Generator – Create a calendar for any year
- Duration between two dates – Calculates number of days
Related time zone tools
- The World Clock – Current times around the world
- Time Zone Converter – If it is 3 pm in New York, what time is it in Sydney?
- Event Time Announcer/Fixed Time – Show local times worldwide for your event.
