Thousands of skywatchers gathered across parts of the Middle East and Asia on Thursday to glimpse the sun forming a ring of fire around the moon in a rare annular solar eclipse.
An annular eclipse occurs when the moon covers the sun’s center but leaves its outer edges visible to form a ring.
A rare annular eclipse draws skywatchers across the Middle East and Asia to witness the ‘ring of fire’ https://t.co/6SjLjMDZcF pic.twitter.com/y8pmA2n6LM
— Reuters (@Reuters) December 26, 2019
Thursday’s was visible in Saudi Arabia as well as Singapore, India, Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
To view a graphic on solar Eclipse, click here
“This will be the first of only two annular eclipses visible from Singapore for the rest of the century. So in that sense, it’s a very rare event for us,” said Albert Ho, president of the Astronomical Society of Singapore. The island’s next will be in 2063.
In most years, two solar eclipses are visible from somewhere on Earth. The maximum number is five.