Eclipse Over New York
			
		
		
			Image Credit & Copyright:  
Chris Cook
		
		
			A sunrise over New York City rarely looks like this.
Yesterday, however, the Sun rose partly 
eclipsed by the Moon 
as seen from much of the eastern North American and northern South America. 
Simultaneously, much of Africa, already well into daytime, saw the 
eclipse from beginning to end.
The eclipse was unusual in that it was a 
hybrid -- parts of the Earth saw the Moon as too angularly small to cover the whole Sun, and so at maximum coverage left the 
Sun surrounded by a 
ring a fire, 
while other parts of the Earth saw the Moon as 
large enough to cover the entire Sun, 
and so at maximum coverage witnessed a 
total solar eclipse.
Slight changes in the 
angular size of the Moon 
as seen from the Earth's surface are caused by the non-flatness of the Earth and the 
ellipticity of the Moon's orbit. 
Pictured above, the famous 
Empire State Building in 
New York City 
is seen to the left of the 
partially eclipsed Sun, adorned with scenic clouds.
The next solar 
eclipse visible from New York 
City -- a very slight eclipse -- will occur during the sunset of 2014 
October 23.