How, where to see the "double sunrise" solar eclipse Saturday morning<br />Saturday's partial solar eclipse offers the rare chance to see a "double sunrise" in the northeastern part of the country.<br />Why it matters: It's the only solar eclipse visible from the U.S. this year and comes two weeks after the total lunar eclipse.<br />814 million people around the globe will be able to see part of the eclipse, which is nearly 10% of the world's population.<br />What is a partial solar eclipse?<br />A partial solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes between the Sun and Earth but the three don't perfectly line up.<br />With a partial eclipse, only a part of the Sun will appear to be covered, which gives it a crescent shape.<br />What we're watching: For the March 29 eclipse, NASA says the Moon will pass in front of and partially block the Sun, casting a shadow on parts of the Northern Hemisphere.<br /><br /><br /><br />eclipse 2025<br />partial solar eclipse 2025<br />what time is the solar eclipse 2025<br />solar eclipse time<br />solar eclipse 2025<br />eclipse today<br />sunrise<br />solar eclipse today<br />what time is the eclipse today<br />solar eclipse march 29 2025<br />new moon<br />R impactx<br /><br />#eclipse #eclipse2025 #partialsolarexlipse2025 #whattimeisthesolareclipse2025 #solareclipsetime #solareclipse2025 #eclipsetoday #sunrise #solareclipsetoday #whattimeistheeclipsetoday #solareclipsemarch292025 #newmoon #rimpactx