FACT CHECK: Will The Next Total Solar Eclipse be The Longest in 100 Years?

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An article in Daily Galaxy and The Times of India claims the next total solar eclipse will be the longest in 100 years. Some social media posts even claimed the solar eclipse will plunge the sky into darkness for over six minutes as it crosses three continents.

Rating: MOSTLY TRUE — with misleading claimsWhat’s true

Here are the facts:

1. A total solar eclipse will occur on August 2, 2027.

2. It will be one of the longest total solar eclipses visible from land in about a century, lasting up to 6 minutes and 23 seconds at its maximum.

3. This is significantly longer than recent eclipses, including the April 8, 2024 total solar eclipse over North America, which lasted about four minutes at most.

4. The eclipse’s path of totality will cross parts of Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, spanning three continents.

What’s misleading

Some posts place the event in 2025. There is no total solar eclipse on August 2, 2025, according to NASA’s eclipse calendar.

Claims that the “world will go dark” are false. Only locations within the narrow path of totality will experience full darkness.

And calling it the absolute “longest eclipse ever” is inaccurate. Longer eclipses have occurred in the past, though not frequently and not in recent decades.

Why this eclipse is unusually long

The extended duration is caused by rare orbital alignment when the Moon will be near its closest point to Earth, appearing larger.

The Sun will appear slightly smaller from Earth. This allows the Moon to block the Sun for a longer time than usual

Bottom line

The August 2, 2027 total solar eclipse is a rare astronomical event and one of the longest visible from land in a century.

But viral posts exaggerate its effects and sometimes get the date wrong.

The next solar eclipse is not apocalyptic — just exceptional.

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