THE RELEVANCE OF THIS UNIT IN EVERY DAY LIFE

To many early civilzations, the presece of the moon and the Sun was essential in dailylife. Our current calender is based on the movement of the Sun whereas the Islamic and Chinese calender are all Lunar calenders. Every Lunar moon begins with a new moon phrase. Although we cannot see the new moon phrese,it has a very special significance with regardto eclipses, especially the eclipse of the Sun. Nowadays, many young people are less interess in studing and seeking careers in scince,perticularly astronomy. This hopes that this topic on eclipses will stimulate their interest in scince and helped them to develop interest in careers such as astronomer,astronautand astrophysicist.

LIST OF ECLIPSES

World Lunar Eclipses, 1999 - 2020

31 Jan 1999 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 114, penumbral mag. 1.028, max. eclipse 16:18 UT     penumb: 14:04:36 UT to 18:30:24 UT) A rare total penumbral eclipse was visible from Africa and Europe at Moonrise; over most of Asia and Australia for the whole eclipse; and over north-western North America at Moonset.
 
28 Jul 1999 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 119, umbral mag. 0.402, max. eclipse 11:34 UT     partial: 10:22:02 UT to 12:45:34 UT) A partial lunar eclipse visible over east Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas.
 
21 Jan 2000 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 124, umbral mag. 1.330, max. eclipse 04:44 UT     total: 04:04:37 UT to 05:22:25 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over Europe, western Africa, and North and South America, providing a spectacle for a large part of the Earth's population -- where it wasn't cloudy!
 
16 Jul 2000 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 129, umbral mag. 1.773, max. eclipse 13:56 UT     total: 13:02:05 UT to 14:49:06 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over the Pacific, Australia, and East Asia.
 
9 Jan 2001 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 134, umbral mag. 1.194, max. eclipse 20:21 UT     total: 19:49:36 UT to 20:51:38 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over all of Europe, Africa, and Asia; and as a partial lunar eclipse in parts of north-eastern North America and Australia.
 
5 Jul 2001 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 139, umbral mag. 0.499, max. eclipse 14:55 UT     partial: 13:35:11 UT to 16:15:22 UT) A partial lunar eclipse was visible over all of Australia, Indonesia, and south-east Asia.
 
30 Dec 2001 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 144, penumbral mag. 0.919, max. eclipse 10:29 UT     penumb: 08:25:31 UT to 12:33:13 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse was visible from the Americas, Asia and Australasia.
 
26 May 2002 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 111, penumbral mag. 0.714, max. eclipse 12:03 UT     penumb: 10:12:49 UT to 13:53:55 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse was visible from the western Americas, east Asia and Australasia.
 
24 Jun 2002 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 149, penumbral mag. 0.235, max. eclipse 21:27 UT     penumb: 20:18:33 UT to 22:35:32 UT) A shallow penumbral eclipse was visible to hawk-eyed observers from South America, Europe, Africa, south Asia, and Australia.
 
20 Nov 2002 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 116, penumbral mag. 0.886, max. eclipse 01:47 UT     penumb: 23:32:04 UT on November 19 to 04:01:10 UT on November 20) A deep penumbral eclipse was visible from the Americas, Europe, Africa, and most of Asia.
 
16 May 2003 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 121, umbral mag. 1.134, max. eclipse 03:40 UT     total: 03:13:49 UT to 04:06:31 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over the Americas, Europe, and Africa.
 
9 Nov 2003 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 126, umbral mag. 1.022, max. eclipse 01:19 UT     total: 01:06:17 UT on November 9 to 01:30:48 UT on November 9) A total lunar eclipse was visible over the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
 
4 May 2004 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 131, umbral mag. 1.309, max. eclipse 20:30 UT     total: 19:52:07 UT to 21:08:27 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over South America, Europe, Asia, Australia, and Africa.
 
28 Oct 2004 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 136, umbral mag. 1.313, max. eclipse 03:04 UT     total: 02:23:28 UT to 03:44:43 UT) A total lunar eclipse was visible over the Americas, Europe, Africa, and parts of Asia.
24 Apr 2005 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 141, penumbral mag. 0.890, max. eclipse 09:55 UT     penumb: 07:49:58 UT to 11:59:55 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse was visible from east Asia, Australia, and the Americas.
 
17 Oct 2005 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 146, umbral mag. 0.068, max. eclipse 12:03 UT     partial: 11:34:06 UT to 12:32:25 UT) A very slender partial lunar eclipse will be visible over east Asia, Australasia, and most of North America. With a magnitude of just 0.068, the partial phase won't be very easy to see, but the shading caused by the penumbral phase should be visible to careful observers.
 
14 Mar 2006 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 113, penumbral mag. 1.056, max. eclipse 23:48 UT     penumb: 21:21:32 UT on March 14 to 02:13:32 UT on March 15) A rare total penumbral eclipse of the Moon will be visible over Asia (the beginning of the eclipse); Europe, Africa and west Asia (the whole eclipse); and the Americas barring the Yukon and Alaska (the end of the eclipse). The shading across the Moon should be quite visible at maximum eclipse.
 
7 Sep 2006 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 118, umbral mag. 0.190, max. eclipse 18:51 UT     partial: 18:05:03 UT to 19:37:41 UT) A very slender partial lunar eclipse will be visible over Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australasia. With a magnitude of just 0.190, the partial phase won't be very easy to see; but the shading caused by the penumbral phase should be visible to careful observers.
 
3 Mar 2007 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 123, umbral mag. 1.238, max. eclipse 23:21 UT     total: 22:43:49 UT on March 3 to 23:58:01 UT on March 3) A total lunar eclipse will be visible over the eastern Americas, Europe, Africa, and western Asia.
 
28 Aug 2007 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 128, umbral mag. 1.481, max. eclipse 10:37 UT     total: 09:52:00 UT to 11:22:45 UT) A total lunar eclipse will be visible over the Americas, the Pacific, eastern Asia, and Australasia.
 
21 Feb 2008 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 133, umbral mag. 1.111, max. eclipse 03:26 UT     total: 03:00:34 UT to 03:51:32 UT) A total lunar eclipse will be visible over the Americas, Europe, Africa, and western Asia.
 
16 Aug 2008 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 138, umbral mag. 0.812, max. eclipse 21:10 UT     partial: 19:35:45 UT to 22:44:38 UT) A deep partial lunar eclipse will be visible over most of Asia, Australasia, Europe, Africa, and south America. Although only a partial eclipse, this eclipse should be quite spectacular, as most of the Moon will pass inside the Earth's umbral shadow at maximum eclipse -- the umbral magnitude is 0.81.
 
9 Feb 2009 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 143, penumbral mag. 0.924, max. eclipse 14:38 UT     penumb: 12:36:50 UT to 16:39:39 UT) A very deep penumbral eclipse will be visible from eastern Europe and Africa, Asia, and most of North America. As a penumbral eclipse, the effects will be subtle, but the depth of this eclipse should make the shading across the Moon quite visible to the naked eye.
 
7 Jul 2009 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 110, penumbral mag. 0.182, max. eclipse 09:39 UT     penumb: 08:32:48 UT to 10:44:27 UT) A shallow penumbral eclipse will technically be visible from the far East, Australia, the Pacific, South America, and most of North America. However, this will be very hard to see with the naked eye.
 
6 Aug 2009 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 148, penumbral mag. 0.428, max. eclipse 00:39 UT     penumb: 23:01:04 UT on August 5 to 02:17:23 UT on August 6) A fairly shallow penumbral eclipse will be visible from south-east North America, South America, Europe, Africa, and west Asia. This will be pretty hard to see with the naked eye, however.
 
 31 Dec 2009 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 115, umbral mag. 0.082, max. eclipse 19:23 UT     partial: 18:51:38 UT to 19:53:51 UT) A very narrow partial lunar eclipse will be visible over most of Asia, Australasia, Europe, and Africa. The partial phase will be quite hard to see with the naked eye, as only a tiny sliver of the Moon will be in the Earth's umbral shadow -- the umbral magnitude is just 0.08. However, the shading of the penumbral phase should be quite visible.
 
26 Jun 2010 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 120, umbral mag. 0.542, max. eclipse 11:38 UT     partial: 10:16:32 UT to 13:00:19 UT) A partial lunar eclipse will be visible over eastern Asia, Australasia, the Pacific, and (partially) the Americas. The Moon will be about half covered by the Earth's umbral shadow at maximum eclipse; the umbral magnitude is 0.54.
 
21 Dec 2010 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 125, umbral mag. 1.261, max. eclipse 08:17 UT     total: 07:40:21 UT to 08:53:34 UT) A total lunar eclipse will be visible over eastern Asia, Australasia, northwestern Europe and Africa, and the Americas. The Moon will be well within the Earth's umbral shadow, in a total eclipse that will last over an hour.
 
15 Jun 2011 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 130, umbral mag. 1.705, max. eclipse 20:13 UT     total: 19:22:11 UT to 21:03:02 UT) An impressive total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from Europe, Africa, most of Asia, and Australia. The end of the eclipse will be visible from South America. The Moon will be well within the Earth's umbral shadow, in a total eclipse that will last over an hour and a half.
 
10 Dec 2011 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 135, umbral mag. 1.111, max. eclipse 14:32 UT     total: 14:05:40 UT to 14:57:55 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from North America (the beginning of the eclipse); eastern Asia and Australia; and Europe and Africa (the end of the eclipse). This will be a relatively shallow eclipse, with the Moon staying near the edge of the Earth's umbral shadow, in a total eclipse lasting less than an hour; still, it should be an impressive sight.
 
4 Jun 2012 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 140, umbral mag. 0.376, max. eclipse 11:03 UT     partial: 09:59:24 UT to 12:07:04 UT) A partial eclipse of the Moon will be visible from the Americas, the Pacific, south-east Asia and Australia. With the Moon less than half covered at total eclipse, this won't be spectacular, but still an interesting event.
 
28 Nov 2012 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 145, penumbral mag. 0.942, max. eclipse 14:33 UT     penumb: 12:12:33 UT to 16:53:18 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse of the Moon will be visible from North America (the beginning of the eclipse), Asia and Australia, and most of Europe and Africa (the end of the eclipse). As a penumbral eclipse, this will be subtle, but its depth means that the shading across the Moon should be visible at maximum eclipse.
 
25 Apr 2013 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 112, umbral mag. 0.021, max. eclipse 20:07 UT     partial: 19:51:42 UT to 20:23:32 UT) An extremely shallow partial eclipse will be visible from most of Asia, Australia, Europe and Africa. The partial phase will actually be so shallow that it will be very hard to spot; but the shading across the Moon caused by the Earth's penumbral shadow should be quite visible.
 
25 May 2013 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 150, penumbral mag. 0.040, max. eclipse 04:10 UT     penumb: 03:43:09 UT to 04:37:05 UT) An extremely shallow penumbral eclipse will be almost impossible to see from the Americas, western Africa, and south-west Europe (and actually impossible to see everywhere else). With only 4% of the Moon's diameter being just very slightly dimmed, I'd stay in bed!
 
18 Oct 2013 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 117, penumbral mag. 0.791, max. eclipse 23:50 UT     penumb: 21:48:16 UT on October 18 to 01:52:05 UT on October 19) A fairly deep penumbral eclipse will be visible from the Americas (for the end), Europe, Africa, and most of Asia (the beginning of the eclipse will be visible in east Asia).
 
15 Apr 2014 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 122, umbral mag. 1.296, max. eclipse 07:46 UT     total: 07:06:21 UT to 08:24:59 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from the Americas, with the end of the total eclipse being visible from eastern Australia.
 
8 Oct 2014 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 127, umbral mag. 1.172, max. eclipse 10:55 UT     total: 10:24:33 UT to 11:24:30 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from east Asia and North America, with the beginning of the total eclipse being visible from most of South America.
 
4 Apr 2015 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 132, umbral mag. 1.005, max. eclipse 12:00 UT     total: 11:54:16 UT to 12:06:12 UT) A very brief total eclipse of the Moon, lasting just 12 minutes, will be visible from east Asia, Australia, and western North America.
 
28 Sep 2015 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 137, umbral mag. 1.282, max. eclipse 02:47 UT     total: 02:10:44 UT to 03:23:30 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from the Americas, Europe and Africa.
 
23 Mar 2016 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 142, penumbral mag. 0.801, max. eclipse 11:47 UT     penumb: 09:36:57 UT to 13:57:19 UT) A fairly deep penumbral eclipse of the Moon will be visible from east Asia, Australia, and most of North America.
 
18 Aug 2016 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 109, penumbral mag. 0.017, max. eclipse 09:42 UT     penumb: 09:24:29 UT to 10:00:53 UT) An extremely shallow -- and virtually invisible -- eclipse of the Moon will technically be visible from Australia and the Americas. 16 Sep 2016 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 147, penumbral mag. 0.933, max. eclipse 18:54 UT     penumb: 16:52:41 UT to 20:55:57 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse of the Moon will be visible from Europe, Afica, Asia and Australia. While subtle, this should be visible as a significant shading across the Moon at maximum eclipse.
11 Feb 2017 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 114, penumbral mag. 1.014, max. eclipse 00:44 UT     penumb: 22:32:09 UT on February 10 to 02:55:27 UT on February 11) A rare total penumbral eclipse of the Moon will be visible from the Americas, Europe, Africa, and most of Asia. While subtle, this should be visible as a distinct shading across the Moon at maximum eclipse.
 
7 Aug 2017 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 119, umbral mag. 0.251, max. eclipse 18:20 UT     partial: 17:22:13 UT to 19:18:44 UT) A shallow partial eclipse of the Moon will be visible from Europe, Africa, most of Asia, and Australia.
 
31 Jan 2018 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 124, umbral mag. 1.321, max. eclipse 13:30 UT     total: 12:51:17 UT to 14:08:13 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from Asia, Australia, and North America.
 
27 Jul 2018 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 129, umbral mag. 1.614, max. eclipse 20:22 UT     total: 19:29:53 UT to 21:13:28 UT)
21 Jan 2019 - Total Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 134, umbral mag. 1.201, max. eclipse 05:12 UT     total: 04:40:44 UT to 05:43:40 UT) A total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from the Americas, Europe, and most of Africa.
 
16 Jul 2019 - Partial Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 139, umbral mag. 0.658, max. eclipse 21:31 UT     partial: 20:01:15 UT on July 16 to 22:59:59 UT on July 16) A partial eclipse of the Moon will be visible from South America, Europe, Africa, south Asia, and Australia.
 
10 Jan 2020 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 144, penumbral mag. 0.921, max. eclipse 19:10 UT     penumb: 17:05:35 UT to 21:14:19 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse will be visible from Africa, Europe, Asia, Alaska, and Australia.
 
5 Jun 2020 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 111, penumbral mag. 0.594, max. eclipse 19:25 UT     penumb: 17:43:21 UT to 21:06:29 UT) A moderate penumbral eclipse will be visible from southern Europe, Africa, south Asia, and Australia.
 
5 Jul 2020 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 149, penumbral mag. 0.380, max. eclipse 04:30 UT     penumb: 03:04:12 UT to 05:55:25 UT) A fairly shallow penumbral eclipse will be visible from the Americas, south-west Europe, and western Africa.
 
30 Nov 2020 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
(Saros 116, penumbral mag. 0.855, max. eclipse 09:43 UT     penumb: 07:29:48 UT to 11:55:40 UT) A deep penumbral eclipse will be visible from east Asia, Australia, and the Americas.

World Solar Eclipses, 1999 - 2020

16 Feb 1999 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 140, umbral mag. 0.993, max. eclipse 06:34 UT     annular: 04:56:39 UT to 08:10:38 UT) The track passes from south of South Africa, across the Indian Ocean and across Australia.
 
11 Aug 1999 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 145, umbral mag. 1.029, max. eclipse 11:03 UT     total: 09:29:54 UT to 12:36:26 UT) On Wednesday, August 11, 1999, a total eclipse of the Sun -- the final total solar eclipse of the millennium (there was none in 2000) -- was visible from the South-West corner of England, much of mainland Europe, the Middle East and South Asia. This was quite literally a once-in-a-lifetime chance for millions of people -- the last total eclipse in the United Kingdom mainland was in 1927, and the next is in 2090! Even Europe will not see such an event again until 2081. This eclipse is from the same Saros series as the famous British total eclipse of Jun 29 1927, although it does not belong to the same triple Saros.
 
5 Feb 2000 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 150, umbral mag. 0.579, max. eclipse 12:49 UT     partial: 10:55:44 UT to 14:43:10 UT) A partial eclipse was visible over most of Antarctica.
 
1 Jul 2000 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 117, umbral mag. 0.477, max. eclipse 19:33 UT     partial: 18:07:09 UT to 20:57:55 UT) A marginal partial eclipse was visible from the far south Pacific and the tip of South America.
31 Jul 2000 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 155, umbral mag. 0.603, max. eclipse 02:13 UT     partial: 00:37:31 UT to 03:48:54 UT) A partial eclipse was visible from northern Siberia, Alaska, northwest Canada, and northern Greenland.
 
25 Dec 2000 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 122, umbral mag. 0.723, max. eclipse 17:35 UT     partial: 15:26:39 UT to 19:43:11 UT) A partial eclipse was visible from most of North and Central America.
 
21 Jun 2001 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 127, umbral mag. 1.050, max. eclipse 12:04 UT     total: 10:36:00 UT to 13:31:37 UT) The track passes from north of the Falklands, to the point of greatest eclipse in the south Atlantic west of Africa, across the African continent, and finishes in the Indian Ocean south-east of Madagascar. It is visible as a partial eclipse as far north as the mid-Sahara. The maximum duration is 4 minutes 57 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 200 kilometers.
 
14 Dec 2001 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 132, umbral mag. 0.968, max. eclipse 20:52 UT     annular: 19:08:09 UT to 22:35:53 UT) The track runs across the Pacific, and finishes in Central America.
 
10 Jun 2002 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 137, umbral mag. 0.996, max. eclipse 23:44 UT     annular: 21:53:53 UT on June 10 to 01:34:40 UT on June 11) The track runs from Australasia, across the Pacific and stops at the Mexico coast.
 
4 Dec 2002 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 142, umbral mag. 1.024, max. eclipse 07:31 UT     total: 05:50:21 UT to 09:11:57 UT) The track begins in the Atlantic, passes across southern Africa, reaches greatest eclipse in the south Pacific, and crosses into southern Australia just before finishing. It is visible as a partial eclipse in most of Africa, and western Australia. The maximum duration is 2 minutes 4 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 87 kilometers.
 
31 May 2003 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 147, umbral mag. 0.938, max. eclipse 04:08 UT     annular: 03:44:53 UT to 04:31:28 UT) An annular eclipse -- the first central (ie. not partial) eclipse in its series -- covers the top of the Earth, and partly misses it entirely. It will be seen in most of the Highlands, including Inverness, the Orkneys, Shetlands, and Lewis (as well as Iceland and large parts of Greenland), at around dawn. The rest of the UK will see the Sun rise partially eclipsed. The next eclipse in the triple-Saros series will happen on Jul 1, 2057, but will not be visible in Britain. However, two eclipses later in the same Saros series, an eclipse is visible in central Britain on Jul 23 2093.
 
23 Nov 2003 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 152, umbral mag. 1.038, max. eclipse 22:49 UT     total: 22:19:25 UT on November 23 to 23:18:57 UT on November 23) The track is confined to Antarctica and the extreme south Pacific. It is visible as a partial eclipse in most of Australia and in Cape Horn.
 
19 Apr 2004 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 119, umbral mag. 0.736, max. eclipse 13:34 UT     partial: 11:29:58 UT to 15:38:39 UT) A marginal partial eclipse, visible only in the south of Africa.
 
14 Oct 2004 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 124, umbral mag. 0.927, max. eclipse 02:59 UT     partial: 00:54:38 UT to 05:04:20 UT) A marginal partial eclipse, visible in eastern Russia, Japan and north-east China.
 
8 Apr 2005 - Hybrid Solar Eclipse
(Saros 129, umbral mag. 1.007, max. eclipse 20:36 UT     annular/total: 18:53:26 UT to 22:18:24 UT) A very narrow eclipse, at 27 km wide at maximum eclipse. The track passes from New Zealand (missing the land) north-east across the Pacific, tailing out in Central America and into South America. It is visible as a partial eclipse in parts of America. The maximum duration is just 42 seconds, and
the path width at maximum is 27 kilometers.
3 Oct 2005 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 134, umbral mag. 0.958, max. eclipse 10:32 UT     annular: 08:41:00 UT to 12:22:36 UT) A long-lasting annular eclipse will be visible from Spain and much of Africa. The track begins in the Atlantic, crosses into Spain, and runs south-east into Africa, terminating in the Indian Ocean. A partial eclipse will be visible from Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and south-west Asia.
 
29 Mar 2006 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 139, umbral mag. 1.052, max. eclipse 10:11 UT     total: 08:34:29 UT to 11:48:01 UT) A major eclipse, and the last reasonably easy chance for Europeans to see a total eclipse of the Sun for many years, this will be a very significant event. The track begins in eastern Brazil, and crosses the Atlantic into western Africa. It runs north-east, crosses the eastern Med, and runs north-east through Asia. It is visible as a partial eclipse throughout Europe, though not spectacularly in Britain. The maximum duration is 4 minutes 7 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 183 kilometers.
 
22 Sep 2006 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 144, umbral mag. 0.935, max. eclipse 11:40 UT     annular: 09:48:32 UT to 13:31:34 UT) The track runs east from central America into the Atlantic, then turns south-east, and finishes south of Africa.
 
19 Mar 2007 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 149, umbral mag. 0.874, max. eclipse 02:32 UT     partial: 00:38:26 UT to 04:25:00 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible over most of Asia.
 
11 Sep 2007 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 154, umbral mag. 0.749, max. eclipse 12:31 UT     partial: 10:25:45 UT to 14:36:33 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible over southern South America, and parts of Antarctica.
 
7 Feb 2008 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 121, umbral mag. 0.965, max. eclipse 03:55 UT     annular: 03:19:43 UT to 04:30:55 UT) The track is restricted to Antarctica and the extreme south Pacific.
 
1 Aug 2008 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 126, umbral mag. 1.039, max. eclipse 10:21 UT     total: 09:21:07 UT to 11:21:28 UT) The track -- 237 km wide at maximum -- begins in north Canada, passes near the North Pole, and into northern Russia. It then runs south-east into China. It is visible as a partial eclipse in Britain, though will not be dramatic. The maximum duration is 2 minutes 27 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 237 kilometers.
 
26 Jan 2009 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 131, umbral mag. 0.928, max. eclipse 07:59 UT     annular: 06:02:39 UT to 09:54:44 UT) The track runs from south of Africa, north-east across the Indian Ocean and into Australasia.
 
22 Jul 2009 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 136, umbral mag. 1.080, max. eclipse 02:35 UT     total: 00:51:17 UT on July 22 to 04:19:26 UT on July 22) The track starts in India, crosses China, reaches greatest eclipse in the Pacific, and runs south-east before tailing off over the ocean. The maximum duration is 6 minutes 39 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 258 kilometers.
 
15 Jan 2010 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 141, umbral mag. 0.919, max. eclipse 07:06 UT     annular: 05:13:54 UT to 08:59:01 UT) The track runs from central Africa, east and curving north across the Indian Ocean into the south tip of India, and into China.
 
11 Jul 2010 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 146, umbral mag. 1.058, max. eclipse 19:34 UT     total: 18:15:15 UT to 20:51:42 UT) The track starts north-east of New Zealand, crosses the Pacific, turns south-east, and touches the southern end of Chile before finishing. A partial eclipse is visible in eastern South America. The maximum duration is 5 minutes 20 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 259 kilometers.
 
4 Jan 2011 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 151, umbral mag. 0.857, max. eclipse 08:51 UT     partial: 06:40:11 UT to 11:00:52 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible in northern Africa, the Middle East, most of Europe, and western Asia.
 
1 Jun 2011 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 118, umbral mag. 0.601, max. eclipse 21:16 UT     partial: 19:25:17 UT to 23:06:57 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible in northern Canada and eastern Russia.
 
1 Jul 2011 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 156, umbral mag. 0.097, max. eclipse 08:38 UT     partial: 07:53:47 UT to 09:22:45 UT) In what must be almost a record for the most insignificant solar eclipse, a tiny partial eclipse will be visible from a small patch of ocean near Antarctica.
 
25 Nov 2011 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 123, umbral mag. 0.905, max. eclipse 06:20 UT     partial: 04:23:14 UT to 08:17:16 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible over most of Antarctica, and barely visible in the extreme south of Africa and Tasmania.
 
20 May 2012 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 128, umbral mag. 0.944, max. eclipse 23:53 UT     annular: 22:06:17 UT on May 20 to 01:39:11 UT on May 21) The path crosses from China and Japan, across the north Pacific, into the western U.S.A. The maximum duration is 5 minutes 46 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 237 kilometers.
 
13 Nov 2012 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 133, umbral mag. 1.050, max. eclipse 22:12 UT     total: 20:35:08 UT on November 13 to 23:48:24 UT on November 13) The path starts in northern Australia, and crosses the south Pacific, ending off South America. The maximum duration is 4 minutes 2 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 179 kilometers.
 
10 May 2013 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 138, umbral mag. 0.954, max. eclipse 00:25 UT     annular: 22:30:34 UT on May 9 to 02:19:58 UT on May 10) The path crosses from northern Australia into the central Pacific. The maximum duration is 6 minutes 3 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 173 kilometers.
 
3 Nov 2013 - Hybrid Solar Eclipse
(Saros 143, umbral mag. 1.016, max. eclipse 12:46 UT     annular/total: 11:05:17 UT to 14:27:42 UT) The path starts in the Atlantic east of Florida, moves southward as it travels east, and crosses central Africa. The maximum duration is 1 minute 40 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 58 kilometers.
 
29 Apr 2014 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 148, umbral mag. 0.984, max. eclipse 06:03 UT     annular: 05:57:50 UT to 06:09:20 UT) The eclipse is visible as annular only from a tiny area in Antarctica. A partial eclipse will be seen over most of Australia.
 
23 Oct 2014 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 153, umbral mag. 0.811, max. eclipse 21:44 UT     partial: 19:37:30 UT to 23:51:36 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible over most of the USA (not the eastern side), western Canada, and Mexico.
 
20 Mar 2015 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 120, umbral mag. 1.045, max. eclipse 09:46 UT     total: 09:09:32 UT to 10:21:20 UT) A total eclipse will be visible in the vicinity of the British Isles in the morning; it will be visible from the Faroes, but not from the UK. The path crosses between Scotland and Iceland, over the Faroe islands, and into the Arctic. A 90% partial eclipse will be seen in north-west Scotland. This is from the same Saros series as the eclipse of Jan 24 1925, and is the last-but-one total eclipse in its Saros series. The next eclipse in the triple-Saros series is a partial eclipse, on Apr 21, 2069.
 
13 Sep 2015 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 125, umbral mag. 0.787, max. eclipse 06:54 UT     partial: 04:41:35 UT to 09:06:20 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible from southern Africa and parts of Antarctica.
 
9 Mar 2016 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 130, umbral mag. 1.045, max. eclipse 01:57 UT     total: 00:15:56 UT on March 9 to 03:38:19 UT on March 9) The path crosses from the Indian Ocean into the Pacific, and finishes off North America. The maximum duration is 4 minutes 9 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 155 kilometers.
 
1 Sep 2016 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 135, umbral mag. 0.974, max. eclipse 09:07 UT     annular: 07:17:46 UT to 10:55:51 UT) The track crosses central Africa southwards to Madagascar and into the Indian Ocean. The maximum duration is 3 minutes 6 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 100 kilometers.
 
26 Feb 2017 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 140, umbral mag. 0.992, max. eclipse 14:53 UT     annular: 13:15:15 UT to 16:31:34 UT) The track crosses southern South America, across the Atlantic, and ends in southern Africa. The maximum duration is 44 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 31 kilometers.
 
21 Aug 2017 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 145, umbral mag. 1.031, max. eclipse 18:25 UT     total: 16:48:33 UT to 20:02:30 UT) The path starts in the Pacific, crosses right over the U.S.A., and ends in the mid Atlantic off Africa. The eclipse will be visible as a spectacular total eclipse to millions of people in Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, the north-east corner of Kansas, Missouri, southern Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, north-east Georgia, and the Carolinas. The maximum duration is 2 minutes 40 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 115 kilometers.
 
15 Feb 2018 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 150, umbral mag. 0.599, max. eclipse 20:51 UT     partial: 18:55:46 UT to 22:47:03 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible from most of Chile and Argentina, and most of Antarctica.
 
13 Jul 2018 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 117, umbral mag. 0.337, max. eclipse 03:01 UT     partial: 01:48:17 UT to 04:13:43 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible from a patch of ocean between Australia and Antarctica; it will be barely visible from Tasmania and the far south-east of Australia.
 
11 Aug 2018 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 155, umbral mag. 0.736, max. eclipse 09:46 UT     partial: 01:48:17 UT to 04:13:43 UT) A partial eclipse will be visible from the Arctic, Greenland, Scandinavia, and north and east Asia.
 
6 Jan 2019 - Partial Solar Eclipse
(Saros 122, umbral mag. 0.715, max. eclipse 01:41 UT     partial: 23:34:02 UT on January 5 to 03:48:44 UT on January 6) A small partial eclipse will be visible from north-east China, Japan, and eastern Russia.
 
2 Jul 2019 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 127, umbral mag. 1.046, max. eclipse 19:23 UT     total: 18:01:04 UT to 20:44:44 UT) The path crosses the south Pacific and ends over Chile and Argentina. The maximum duration is 4 minutes 33 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 201 kilometers.
 
26 Dec 2019 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 132, umbral mag. 0.970, max. eclipse 05:18 UT     annular: 03:34:24 UT to 07:00:54 UT) The track crosses southern India. The maximum duration is 3 minutes 39 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 118 kilometers.
 
21 Jun 2020 - Annular Solar Eclipse
(Saros 137, umbral mag. 0.994, max. eclipse 06:40 UT     annular: 04:47:38 UT to 08:32:16 UT) The track crosses from mid Africa, across northern India and south-east Asia, and into the Pacific. The maximum duration is 0 minutes 38 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 21 kilometers.
 
14 Dec 2020 - Total Solar Eclipse
(Saros 142, umbral mag. 1.025, max. eclipse 16:13 UT     total: 14:32:28 UT to 17:54:13 UT) The path crosses from the Pacific to the Atlantic via Chile and Argentina, and ends off southern Africa. The maximum duration is 2 minutes 10 seconds, and the path width at maximum is 90 kilometers.

http://www.hermit.org/eclipse/when_lunars.html
http://www.hermit.org/eclipse/when_solars.html