No. Penumbral eclipses, in which the Moon passes through the lighter partial shadow of the Earth, are not generally noticeable without the use of specialized equipment. We human beings are remarkable at being able to see in light from bright full sunlight to very dim cloudy days, in which the level of light is a tiny fraction of full sunlight. So when the Moon is only illuminated by PART of the Sun's light rather than by all of it, we generally can't see any difference!
No single eclipse ... solar or lunar ... is ever visible from every place on earth.No single solar eclipse is ever visible from every place or even half of the earth.
lunar eclipse
The next eclipse visible in the Philippines will be a partial lunar eclipse on May 16, 2022, followed by an annular solar eclipse on April 20, 2042.
The next eclipse will be a total lunar eclipse on May 16-17, 2022, visible from the Americas, Europe, Africa, and parts of Asia. The next solar eclipse will be a partial eclipse on October 25, 2022, visible from parts of North America.
There are generally 2 to 5 solar eclipses per year. However, not all eclipses are visible from the same location. Lunar eclipses are more frequent, with 2 to 4 visible per year from any single location.
They are all visible to SOMEBODY.
To the extent that the December 31, 2009 eclipse is visible at all, it will be visible from the western half of Africa, all of Europe and Asia. However, the eclipse is a 7% partial eclipse; a small sliver of the Moon will be darkened, but the entire Moon will not be eclipsed.
The solar eclipse of July 22, 2009 will not be visible in Mexico at all. Only in areas in Asia, from India to China and across the Pacific Ocean, will the eclipse be visible. Sorry about that.
About 7 PM last night. The eclipse was only visible from Asia; it was not visible at all in North America.
no
The solar eclipse of July 11, 2010 will not be visible in India at all.
In 2011, there will be a partial eclipse of the sun on June 1st, visible only in Alaska and northern Canada. There will be a total lunar eclipse on June 15th, but it will not be visible in North America at all.
The eclipse, which is being called the Christmas Lunar Eclipse by some scientists, will be visible over all of North America, beginning locally at 12:27 a.m. Tuesday. The "total phase" -- which is the most visible portion of the eclipse -- will be visible from 2:40 a.m. to 3:53 a.m. The end of the eclipse will be at 6:06 a.m.
There will be a total lunar eclipse visible from all of North America on December 21, 2010.
no only in certain areas
The eclipse will not be visible in Dallas (or anywhere else in the United States, with the exception of Hawaii where a partial eclipse of about 10% will be visible).
The layer of the sun that is only visible in an eclipse is called the corona.