List of solar eclipses visible from Russia

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This list of solar eclipses visible from Russia enumerates the solar eclipses that have been seen and will be seen in Russia.

20th century (RSFSR and Russian Federation)[edit]

Total and annular eclipses[edit]

Total eclipse of March 9, 1997 from Chita
April 8, 1921

Annular
June 29, 1927

Total
June 19, 1936

Total
April 19, 1939

Annular
September 21, 1941

Total
February 4, 1943

Total
July 9, 1945

Total
May 9, 1948

Annular
September 12, 1950

Total
February 25, 1952

Total
June 30, 1954

Total
April 30, 1957

Annular
February 15, 1961

Total
July 20, 1963

Total
May 20, 1966

Annular
September 22, 1968

Total
July 10, 1972

Total
July 31, 1981

Total
July 22, 1990

Total
March 9, 1997

Total

Partial eclipses[edit]

21st century[edit]

Total and annular eclipses[edit]

Total eclipse of August 1, 2008 from Novosibirsk
March 29, 2006

Total
August 1, 2008

Total
June 10, 2021

Annular
August 12, 2026

Total
June 1, 2030

Annular
March 30, 2033

Total
June 21, 2039

Annular
April 9, 2043

Total
June 11, 2048

Annular
July 1, 2057

Annular
April 30, 2060

Total
April 20, 2061

Total
August 24, 2063

Total
June 22, 2066

Annular
September 12, 2072

Total
July 13, 2075

Annular
July 3, 2084

Annular
April 21, 2088

Total
May 11, 2097

Total

Partial eclipses[edit]

Partial eclipse of January 4, 2011 from Moscow
Partial eclipse of October 25, 2022 from Saratov

22nd century[edit]

Total and annular eclipses[edit]

February 28, 2101

Annular
July 15, 2102

Annular
October 5, 2108

Total
May 24, 2115

Total
September 26, 2117

Total
March 22, 2118

Annular
July 25, 2120

Annular
May 14, 2124

Total
October 16, 2126

Total
August 15, 2129

Annular
June 3, 2133

Total
April 1, 2136

Annular
January 8, 2141

Annular
May 25, 2142

Total
April 2, 2155

Annular
August 5, 2157

Annular
November 7, 2162

Total
August 25, 2166

Annular
June 25, 2169

Total
October 29, 2171

Total
January 29, 2177

Annular
June 16, 2178

Total
April 3, 2182

Hybrid
September 4, 2184

Annular
July 6, 2187

Total
August 26, 2193

Annular
February 10, 2195

Annular
June 26, 2196

Total

Eclipses for major cities in next 10 years[edit]

Cities with a population of more than one million people, Kaliningrad and the top five cities by population of the Far East are listed here. Obscuration and moment of time with maximum magnitude (UTC) are indicated. Annular and total eclipses in cities are market with bold.

City 2025-03-29[1] 2026-08-12[2] 2027-08-02[3] 2029-06-12[4] 2030-06-01[5]
Chelyabinsk 89,12% 05:58
Chita 88,59% 07:22
Kaliningrad 11,60% 11:30 81,92% 18:02 23,38% 09:21 6,92% 02:57 59,08% 05:27
Kazan 2,15% 09:51 80,30% 05:45
Khabarovsk 87,50% 07:45
Krasnodar 32,15% 09:50 88,61% 05:17
Krasnoyarsk 89,26% 06:48
Moscow 2,01% 11:49 ~2% 17:08[6] 9,25% 09:39 1,61% 02:52 71,30% 05:36
Nizhny Novgorod 0,63% 11:55 4,42% 09:45 0,39% 02:52 75,18% 05:42
Novosibirsk 88,50% 06:32
Omsk 89,30% 06:16
Perm 0,08% 12:05 79,71% 05:56
Rostov-on-Don 25,56% 09:49 88,64% 05:21
Saint Petersburg 12,75% 11:43 79,17% 17:51 6,25% 09:30 6,70% 03:01 57,83% 05:40
Samara 4,29% 09:55 87,01% 05:42
Ulan-Ude 85,40% 07:15
Ufa 0,20% 09:59 87,50% 05:51
Vladivostok 82,49% 07:53
Voronezh 15,99% 09:44 81,34% 05:29
Yakutsk 63,28% 07:18
Yekaterinburg 85,13% 06:00

Total and annular eclipses between 1001 and 2300 in cities[edit]

Chelyabinsk[edit]

Chita[edit]

Irkutsk[edit]

Kaliningrad[edit]

Kazan[edit]

Khabarovsk[edit]

Krasnodar[edit]

Krasnoyarsk[edit]

Moscow[edit]

Nizhny Novgorod[edit]

Novosibirsk[edit]

Omsk[edit]

Perm[edit]

Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky[edit]

Rostov-on-Don[edit]

Samara[edit]

Saratov[edit]

St. Petersburg[edit]

Ufa[edit]

Vladivostok[edit]

Volgograd[edit]

Voronezh[edit]

Yakutsk[edit]

Yekaterinburg[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Partial Eclipse of the Sun: 2025 March 29". Archived from the original on 2018-12-09. Retrieved 2018-12-08.
  2. ^ "Total Eclipse of the Sun: 2026 August 12". Archived from the original on 2020-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  3. ^ "Total Eclipse of the Sun: 2027 August 02". Archived from the original on 2019-01-28. Retrieved 2019-01-27.
  4. ^ "Partial Eclipse of the Sun: 2029 June 12". Archived from the original on 2021-10-20. Retrieved 2020-01-20.
  5. ^ "Annular Eclipse of the Sun: 2030 June 01". Archived from the original on 2021-04-21. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  6. ^ 12 August 2026 — Total Solar Eclipse — Moscow. The partial eclipse will be during sunset

External links[edit]