No. A dark patch on the sun is a sunspot. A solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between Earth and the sun, partially or completely blocking its light.
An eclipse is when the earth, moon and sun are all in a straight line, from earth it looks like the sun has turned dark!
Yes, it will go dark during a solar eclipse as the moon passes between the sun and the Earth, blocking out the sunlight.
the sun will go dark for a while.
For a eclipse you would need the earth, sun and the moon.A SOLAR ECLIPSE is where the sun is being obscured (hidden) by the moonwhen the sun is being obscured, it would get very dark outside, and the temperatures would drop.A LUNAR ECLIPSE is where the sun, earth and moon are aligned.
you see there is no sun and outside is dark
The Sun was eclipsed. It became dark for a few minutes.
you see there is no sun and outside is dark
Here's a few ways: The eclipse was scheduled for midnight. I own a Mitsubishi Eclipse. The right tackle eclipsed the fan he was speaking to.
An eclipse occurs when the moon moves infrount of the sun so we cannot see the sun and this blocks out the light on earth and therefor we cannot see very well because it is dark so we cannot see because it is quite dark.
An eclipse is actually the moon blocking out the sun FYI, so the sky goes all dark. Search wikipedia.
To get a Solar Eclipse dragon in DragonVale, you need to breed dragons that have the elements of Light, Dark, and Lightning. Try breeding dragons like Light Rift and Dark Rift, or Light and Dark dragons with a Lightning dragon. Keep trying different combinations until you successfully breed a Solar Eclipse dragon egg.
Well.......both types of eclipse have to do with blocking the sun, or making shade. In a Lunar Eclipse, the Earth gets right between the Sun and the Moon, casting a shadow over the moon. The moon goes somewhat dark, appearing dark reddish in the sky. In a Solar Eclipse the Moon gets between the Sun and the Earth, and the moon casts a shadow on the Earth. From Earth we see the dark disk of the moon sliding over the bright sun, blocking the light.