The Sun's corona.
Yes, it gets dark during a total solar eclipse.
Sometimes, during a total solar eclipse, the corona of sun is visible to our eyes.
During a total solar eclipse, at one point it will be almost completely dark.
You can see the corona during a total solar eclipse
-- During a partial solar eclipse, part of the sun is obscured from our view (by the moon) and the rest of it is still there. -- During a total solar eclipse, the entire disk of the sun is obscured from our view (by the moon).
The earth gets it's light from the sun. During a total solar eclipse, the moon blocks that light.
The thin red rim around the Sun during a total solar eclipse is called the solar chromosphere. It is the lower part of the Sun's atmosphere and is visible during a total solar eclipse when the Moon fully covers the Sun's bright disk, allowing the chromosphere to be seen.
During a total solar eclipse, it can get as dark as twilight or even darker, depending on the location and the amount of sunlight blocked by the moon.
A blank sky, with no moon!
During a Solar Eclipse a pregnant woman should do nothing different to anybody else.
The entire area becomes completely dark as a normal solar eclipse woulddo to a certain area.
A solar eclipse may be partial, total, or annular.