Solar eclipse of June 12, 2029

A partial solar eclipse will occur at the Moon's descending node of orbit on Tuesday, June 12, 2029, with a magnitude of 0.4576. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth. A partial solar eclipse occurs in the polar regions of the Earth when the center of the Moon's shadow misses the Earth. The eclipse will be visible from Northern and Central Europe, northern Russia, Arctic, Greenland, and northern North America.

This will be the second of four partial solar eclipses in 2029, with the others occurring on January 14, July 11, and December 5.

It also precedes the two total lunar eclipses occurring on June 26 and December 20.

Images
Animated path

Eclipses in 2029

 * A partial solar eclipse on January 14, 2029.
 * A partial solar eclipse on June 12, 2029.
 * A total lunar eclipse on June 26, 2029.
 * A partial solar eclipse on July 11, 2029.
 * A partial solar eclipse on December 5, 2029.
 * A total lunar eclipse on December 20, 2029.

Metonic

 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of March 30, 2033

Tzolkinex

 * Preceded by: Solar eclipse of April 30, 2022
 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of July 23, 2036

Half-Saros

 * Preceded by: Lunar eclipse of June 5, 2020
 * Followed by: Lunar eclipse of June 17, 2038

Tritos

 * Preceded by: Solar eclipse of July 13, 2018
 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of May 11, 2040

Solar Saros 118

 * Preceded by: Solar eclipse of June 1, 2011
 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of June 23, 2047

Inex

 * Preceded by: Solar eclipse of July 1, 2000
 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of May 22, 2058

Triad

 * Preceded by: Solar eclipse of August 12, 1942
 * Followed by: Solar eclipse of April 13, 2116