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.
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.
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.
During a solar eclipse the moon is in between the earth and the sun. The moon blocks light from the son, causing a solar eclipse. (This is during the new moon phase.)
Nothing at all; during a solar eclipse, the Moon blocks the Sun and is seen in silhouette.
Simple. You can't see any of the sun during a solar eclipse.