On October 14, 2023, an eclipse of the Sun will be visible from all of North and Central America and much of South America (except for the southern tip). Most observers across the Americas will see only a partial solar eclipse, as the Moon hides anywhere from a sliver of the Sun’s face to almost the entire solar disk. For more information about the different types of solar eclipses, visit our “Solar Eclipse Types” blog.
However, those eclipse watchers who are properly positioned along a narrow track slightly more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) wide will witness something extraordinary. For roughly 5 minutes at the mid-point of solar eclipse 2023, the Sun will appear to have a gaping hole in its midsection. The narrow track where this is visible is called the path of annularity, and the apparent ‘hole’ in the Sun is a visual effect caused by the Moon moving directly in front of the Sun.