July 21st
No. The next solar eclipse to be visible in the USA will be an annular eclipse on May 20, 2012. The next total eclipse visible in the US will be on August 21, 2017.
No part of the solar eclipse of July 21-22, 2009 was visible from anywhere in the US.
There was a partial solar eclipse on March 19, 2007, visible from northern Alaska, and an annular eclipse was visible across much of the US on May 10, 1994. The total eclipse of July 11, 1991 was visible throughout the Hawaiian Islands, and was visible as a partial eclipse in much of the southwestern US.
The next total solar eclipse will be July 22nd, 2009, visible in Asia and the Pacific. The next total solar eclipse visible in the US will be August 21, 2017, mark your calendar! See the link to check for other eclipses.
The next total solar eclipse visible in the US will occur on August 21, 2017, and will be visible in a path from coast to coast, from Salem Oregon to Charleston, South Carolina. See the link below for a Google Map.
No. The solar eclipse of July 22, 2009 was only visible in Asia. However, Portland OR will be an excellent spot to see the next total solar eclipse in the US, on August 21, 2017.
The next really good total solar eclipse will be visible in the United States from Oregon to South Carolina on August 21, 2017.
There have been three or four partial eclipses in each decade, but the last TOTAL solar eclipse visible in Atlanta, GA was on June 24, 1778. The NEXT total solar eclipse visible in Atlanta will be on May 11, 2078.
There will be a total solar eclipse on August 21, 2017, which will be visible along a path from Portland Oregon to Charleston South Carolina. You should make your hotel reservations NOW.
I am 95% sure that the next US total solar eclipse is the one on August the 21st. 2017, which has 02m40s of totality. There may also be some partial eclipses visible before then.
No. Any single solar eclipse is visible to no more than20% of the Earth's surface. Of this area, the area of total eclipse (if any) is much smaller, about 1/1000th the area of partial eclipse.Any solar eclipse will only be visible to one hemisphere (the one in daylight), and to less than one-quarter of that hemisphere (due to the tilt of the Earth). It is limited in size to the area of the shadow cast by the Moon, as that shadow moves across the spinning Earth. The Moon will not change its position appreciably during the eclipse. Due to variations in the Moon's orbital position, some eclipses may be visible to less than 1% of the globe.The maximum duration of the shadow's crossing is about 5 hours. For any given location, the time any partial shadow lasts is about 2 hours. A total eclipse will have a maximum period of totality of from 1 to 7.5 minutes at any location. (For the August 21, 2017 total eclipse in the US, maximum duration of totality = 2 minutes, 40 seconds.)
There will be a partial lunar eclipse on June 4, 2012, visible from the western US and eastern Australia, and a penumbral lunar eclipse on November 28, 201 which may or may not be visible in Asia, Africa and eastern Europe. There will be a total solar eclipse visible from the northern tip of Queensland, Australia and across the Pacific Ocean on November 13, 2012.