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Hybrid Solar Eclipse

Thursday, 13 August 2026

🇮🇳 Visible from India

Eclipse Type
Hybrid Solar Eclipse
Peak (IST)
9:22 AM IST
Magnitude
1.479
Countdown
Partial phases visible from parts of India
☀️ What You Will See — Hybrid Solar Eclipse

This Hybrid Solar Eclipse will be a notable astronomical event. Watch the contact times table above to track each phase as it unfolds.

IST Contact Times

PhaseIST TimeDescription
Greatest Eclipse (Mid)9:22 AM ISTMaximum eclipse magnitude reached
C1 — Partial Eclipse Begins8:02 AM ISTMoon's silhouette first touches Sun's disc
C2 — Central Phase Begins8:42 AM ISTAnnular or total phase begins
Greatest Eclipse (Mid)9:22 AM ISTMaximum eclipse occurs
C3 — Central Phase Ends10:02 AM ISTRing of fire / totality ends
C4 — Partial Eclipse Ends10:42 AM ISTMoon's silhouette leaves Sun's disc
📐 Eclipse Geometry — Magnitude 1.479

Eclipse magnitude 1.479 means the Moon's apparent diameter covers 148% of the Sun's diameter at greatest eclipse. Because magnitude exceeds 1.0, the Moon is large enough to cover the Sun completely — defining the central (total or annular) phase. The gamma value of 0.7516 describes how far the Moon's shadow axis passes from Earth's centre (in units of Earth's equatorial radius); lower absolute gamma means a more central, longer eclipse.

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Eye Safety — ISO Glasses Required

Use ISO 12312-2 certified eclipse glasses or a properly filtered telescope throughout the entire eclipse — there is no safe moment to look without protection.

Grahan in Hindu Tradition

Surya Grahan (सूर्य ग्रहण)

A solar eclipse is called Surya Grahan. Sutak begins 12 hours before a solar eclipse. Temples are closed. It is traditional to avoid eating, sleep, or auspicious activities. A bath and prayer after the eclipse is recommended.

Visibility Note

Partial phases visible from parts of India. Always use ISO 12312-2 certified eclipse glasses to view a solar eclipse safely — never look directly at the Sun.