Watch the Total Solar Eclipse Live Online with Scientific American

Celebrate the April 8 total solar eclipse with these livestreams from NASA, the NSF, Scientific American, and more

Solar eclipse in four stages (digital composite), low angle view

Siegfried Layda/Getty Images

This article is part of a special report on the total solar eclipse that will be visible from parts of the U.S., Mexico and Canada on April 8, 2024.

It’s the science event of the decade: a total solar eclipse will cross North America on April 8. Maybe you won’t be able to travel to an area in the path of totality. Maybe your view will be obscured by clouds. Never fear: if all else fails, you can watch the rare spectacle online, thanks to a handful of livestreams designed to share the eclipse with viewers around the globe.

First up, check out Scientific American’s own livestreams. Throughout the weekend and the day of the eclipse, we’ll have a team live on the ground in Texas that will hang out with top-tier eclipse chasers and share the experience.


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Catch up with April 6's broadcast with our senior space and physics editor Clara Moskowitz and Kate Russo, a psychologist and author who has seen 13 total solar eclipses in the past 20 years. Russo will be answering questions about the eclipse from viewers in the livestream chats, so be sure to tune in!

Then on April 8, at 1:15 P.M. EDT, we’ll be back on Instagram and YouTube for the big day! Scientific American staffers will give you the on-the-ground experience of chasing totality, with close-ups of the sun and expert commentary.

We also hope to offer a view of the eclipse that you can’t catch from anywhere on the ground, even with a “perfect location” and clear skies: a team of researchers will be using two jets from NASA’s WB-57 High Altitude Research Program that were converted into high-flying telescopes to chase the eclipse for science.

When the team made its first eclipse flight during 2017’s coast-to-coast spectacle, the scientists produced high-resolution images of the sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona, in a wavelength of light in which it had never been captured before. By flying along the path of totality, the researchers also stretched their view of this total solar eclipse to about seven and a half minutes—despite the fact that no place on Earth experienced totality for longer than two minutes and 42 seconds.

This spring’s eclipse is even more promising because it will last up to four minutes and 28 seconds on the ground. In the jet-based observation effort, the researchers hope to stretch that to eight minutes aloft. And during their flight this eclipse, the planes will carry upgraded instruments. The jets will also be equipped with new experiments, including one used to study material leaving the sun, such as the blobs of plasma and magnetic field dubbed coronal mass ejections and the steady stream of charged particles known as the solar wind.

Our broadcast of views of the eclipse will have plenty of company. Check out these other options for watching the event on April 8—without needing to worry about protecting your eyes with eclipse glasses.

Keep in mind that the partial eclipse will begin over the Pacific Ocean at 12:27 P.M. EDT and will make landfall over Sinaloa, Mexico, about half an hour later. Totality will begin there at 2:07 P.M. EDT and will reach Texas 20 minutes later. It will end over the Canadian island of Newfoundland at 3:46 P.M. EDT. The partial eclipse will also end over Newfoundland at 4:48 P.M. EDT.

NASA

NASA is offering a handful of webcasts for the 2024 eclipse, including versions with English- and Spanish-language commentary and telescope feeds from across North America. The agency will also be presenting broadcast of three sounding rockets that will launch from Virginia during the eclipse to study how the atmosphere responds to the phenomenon.

NSF

The National Science Foundation (NSF) will also broadcast the eclipse, beginning at 1:55 P.M. EDT on April 8. During the event, NSF researchers will talk about the science of the sun and the agency’s Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii, which is the largest solar telescope on Earth.

Additional webcasts

Editor’s Note: Until April 8, this article will be periodically updated with additional content as it becomes available.

Meghan Bartels is a science journalist based in New York City. She joined Scientific American in 2023 and is now a senior news reporter there. Previously, she spent more than four years as a writer and editor at Space.com, as well as nearly a year as a science reporter at Newsweek, where she focused on space and Earth science. Her writing has also appeared in Audubon, Nautilus, Astronomy and Smithsonian, among other publications. She attended Georgetown University and earned a master’s degree in journalism at New York University’s Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program.

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