The sun is about to pull another disappearing act across North America, turning day into night during a total solar eclipse.
The peak spectacle on April 8 will last up to 4 minutes, 28 seconds in the path of total darkness — twice as long as the total solar eclipse that dimmed U.S. skies in 2017.
This eclipse will take a different and more populated route, entering over Mexico’s Pacific coast, dashing up through Texas and Oklahoma, and crisscrossing the Midwest, mid-Atlantic and New England, before exiting over eastern Canada into the Atlantic.
Ricky Stenhouse punching Kyle Busch could lead to suspension
UC regents committee orders UCLA to pay Cal Berkeley $10 million per year for 3 years
Whistleblower questions EPA delays in use of sensor plane after Norfolk Southern derailment
Minnesota Uber and Lyft driver pay package beats deadline to win approval in Legislature
Astros starter Ronel Blanco ejected in the fourth inning after a foreign substance check
Brewers' Rhys Hoskins goes on 10
Google unleashes artificial intelligence in search, favoring responses by AI over links
Supreme Court declines to hear challenge to Maryland ban on rifles known as assault weapons