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The world to go dark for six minutes in event that won't be seen again for 100 years

Home> News> World News

Updated 14:46 21 Jul 2025 GMT+1Published 14:05 21 Jul 2025 GMT+1

The world to go dark for six minutes in event that won't be seen again for 100 years

Nothing will rival this until the next century

Joe Harker

Joe Harker

In a couple of years, there will be an event that won't be seen again for another century in the form of a total solar eclipse.

Scribble down the date of 2 August, 2027 in your calendars and make travel plans to head for the best spot if you want to spend several minutes plunged into darkness during the daytime thanks to this cosmic event.

A total solar eclipse occurs when the moon completely blocks out the sun, resulting in the land being cast with shadows when there ought to be sunlight.

The darkest part of this shadow is known as the 'totality', and if you're in the right place at the right time you can stay within it for several minutes.

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According to Space, the totality for this bad boy is going to be six minutes and 23 seconds, meaning this is going to be the longest total solar eclipse since 1991, and there won't be another one like it until almost a century later in 2114.

It'll be the biggest total solar eclipse since 1991, and you'd have to wait until 2114 for bigger (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
It'll be the biggest total solar eclipse since 1991, and you'd have to wait until 2114 for bigger (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Basically, you're not going to live to see another eclipse like this one.

You know the date it'll arrive, but as for where you'd be for the best sight the clue is found in the name it's been given, as this total solar eclipse has been dubbed the 'Great North African Eclipse'.

That's where you'll get the best view of this thing and indeed the absolute best viewing spot in the world is going to be Luxor, Egypt, which is where the totality will be visible for the longest time.

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In case you can't make it there then it'll still be viewable from various other spots across North Africa and a few parts of Southern Europe including Gibraltar.

There are tens of millions of people living in the path of this eclipse's totality and many of them will have the clear skies needed to get the best view of this.

The historical Egyptian city of Luxor is going to be the best place to see the total eclipse, remember it's on 2 August, 2027  (Paul Biris/Getty Images)
The historical Egyptian city of Luxor is going to be the best place to see the total eclipse, remember it's on 2 August, 2027 (Paul Biris/Getty Images)

For many other parts of the world, darkness will fall in the form of a partial solar eclipse, which will be impressive but not quite as majestic a sight as being in the totality of the Great North African Eclipse.

Given that most of our planet's surface is water the best place to view a total eclipse is usually somewhere out at sea, as the movements of the cosmos care little for where people who want to see them are living, but this eclipse has the honour of being the biggest one on land for almost a century.

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Not only that, it's going to be one of the longest ever recorded total eclipses.

Research from meteorologist Jean Meeus says that the longest possible total eclipse is seven minutes and 31 seconds, so this one clocking in at just a minute under is seriously impressive.

There are other total solar eclipses pencilled in for 2026 and 2028, but they don't come close to the time you'd be able to see this one for, and nothing will until the next century.

Featured Image Credit: Getty/Edwin Remsburg

Topics: World News, Space, Science

Joe Harker
Joe Harker

Joe graduated from the University of Salford with a degree in Journalism and worked for Reach before joining the LADbible Group. When not writing he enjoys the nerdier things in life like painting wargaming miniatures and chatting with other nerds on the internet. He's also spent a few years coaching fencing. Contact him via [email protected]

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@MrJoeHarker

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