What you photo during a solar eclipse is the solar rings showing around the moon. It is possible to photo them but you need to put a dark lense on the front of the camera and do not look at the screen directly.
It would during a solar eclipse, but probably not during a lunar eclipse.
The sun is hidden during a solar eclipse
There is no historical evidence to suggest that a solar eclipse occurred during the crucifixion.
Yes, it gets dark during a total solar eclipse.
During a solar eclipse, the Moon is directly in between the Sun and the Earth; a solar eclipse is the Moon's shadow falling on the Earth.
The white halo that can be seen during the Solar Eclipse is the Sun's Corona.
During a solar eclipse, the moon must be in the new moon phase.
During a lunar eclipse, the moon is "full". During a solar eclipse the moon is "new".
We see solar eclipses only during New Moon, but not every New Moon is accompanied by a solar eclipse.
Sometimes, during a total solar eclipse, the corona of sun is visible to our eyes.
Never let it be said that WikiAnswers can't provide EXACTLY what you are looking for. In 1999, Russian cosmonauts aboard the MIR space station took a photo of the Earth during a total solar eclipse; see the photo on the NASA "Astronomy Photo of the Day" at the link below. THAT's what it looks like!
You see the photo-sphere of the sun behind the planet.