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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.
During a solar eclipse, the shadow of the MOON falls on the EARTH.
In a solar eclipse there is the sun, the moon, and Earth. It looks like a halo around a ball of darkness.
Solar eclipse--Sun, moon, Earth Lunar eclipse-- Sun, Earth, moon
In order to have a solar eclipse the moon has to be directly between the earth and the sun in order to cast a shadow over the earth thus creating a solar eclipse only in certain areas of the earth.
An eclipse. When the Earth is in the Moon's shadow, it's a solar eclipse; when the Moon is in the Earth's shadow, it's a lunar eclipse.
They are in that order : Sun, Moon, Earth. In a solar eclipse, the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth, casting a shadow that rapidly moves across the surface.
A solar eclipse is when the moon blocks out the sun.
During a lunar eclipse, the Earth is between the sun and the moon; the shadow of Earth darkens the moon. During a solar eclipse, the moon is between Earth and the sun; the moon blocks the sun.
The Moon and Sun are in the sky, and the Earth is right there underneath you like it always is. It's hard to answer the question seriously without a diagram. I advise visiting the sites linked below, which answer the question far more thoroughly than we could hope to.
earth,sun moon
Simple. You can't see any of the sun during a solar eclipse.