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Gallery|Climate Crisis

Solar eclipse delights people in Asia and Australasia

Thousands turn their eyes to the skies as the Sun moves behind the moon.

Solar Eclipse
The first solar eclipse of 2016 has taken place. [EPA]

By Steff Gaulter

Published On 9 Mar 20169 Mar 2016

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The first solar eclipse of 2016 has delighted crowds across Asia and Australasia.

People ran out onto the streets to see the spectacle, using eclipse glasses, or anything else they could find which might protect their eyes.

A solar eclipse happens when the moon moves between the Earth and the Sun. It can only happen when there is a full moon, when the moon passes directly between the Sun and the Earth.

The fact that we can see a total eclipse is a strange coincidence of astronomy. The Sun’s diameter is 400 times that of our tiny moon, but the moon just happens to be 400 times closer to Earth than the Sun.

This is the only total solar eclipse which will take place this year. It was first visible from Sumatra in Indonesia, before spreading east, across Borneo, Sulawesi and Halmahera.

A partial eclipse was visible across a far greater area, including parts of Australia, much of eastern Asia and Hawaii.

Solar Eclipse
A partial eclipse was visible in parts of Asia, Australia and even on the Pacific islands of Hawaii. [EPA]
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Solar Eclipse
The total eclipse was only visible in Indonesia and some of the Pacific Islands. [EPA]
Solar Eclipse
A partial eclipse was seen above the Singapore Flyer in Singapore. [EPA]
Solar Eclipse
It was also visible above the Independence Monument in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. [EPA]
Solar Eclipse
The Prambanan Temple in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, provided a dramatic photo opportunity. [EPA]
Solar Eclipse
The moon is beginning to obscure the sun in Jakarta. [EPA]
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Solar Eclipse
Millions of people turned their eyes skywards to see the sun disappear behind the moon. [EPA]
Solar Eclipse
The next solar eclipse will take place on September 1, but this will not be a total eclipse. [EPA]


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