That's a wrap for one of the most anticipated celestial events of the year.
A total solar eclipse â nicknamed the Great North American Eclipse for its long path over North America â was visible in the sky today over parts of Mexico, 15 U.S. states and eastern Canada.
Tens of millions of people were treated to stunning views as the moon passed between Earth and the sun and temporarily blocked the sunâs light.
Watch some of the most emotional moments from the eclipse
That's a wrap for our live blog. Thank you for joining us for this incredible event.
We leave you with a look at some of the most emotional moments of the day.
Is it safe to look at the sun? Google searches spike on eclipse day
Google searches about whether it's safe to look at the sun spiked today during the solar eclipse. It is never safe to gaze directly at the sun, even when it is partly or mostly covered by the moon.

Special eclipse glasses that are thousands of times darker than normal sunglasses are required to safely view solar eclipses and prevent eye damage. Pinhole projectors can also be made to safely view these celestial events.
In a Cleveland NICU, babies get some special eyewear
CLEVELAND â Babies under the care of the Cleveland Clinic Childrenâs Neonatal Intensive Care Unit were also celebrating the eclipse today with these special onesies and eye gear.
Caregivers dressed up the newborns to help them mark this special day they wonât be able to fully experience themselves. While the next total solar eclipse inside the United States is about two decades away, these babies will be 75 years old the next time a total solar eclipse like this comes to Ohio.

âWe celebrate all sorts of things in the NICU: milestones, holidays, and now the solar eclipse! Itâs so sweet to involve the babies by dressing them up for the occasion,â Katrina Wiedenfeld, MSN, RN, with the Cleveland Clinic Childrenâs NICU said in a statement.
The clinic noted their eye covers in the photos of course arenât official eclipse eyewear, but they do help protect their eyes from some NICU therapy treatments.
âItâs such an exciting time here in Cleveland,â Dana Traci, BSN, RN, said in a statement. âSince our babies in the NICU wonât be going outside to see the total solar eclipse on Monday, we all really wanted to do something special to mark this day in history.â
Marveling at the solar eclipse
From California to Maine, people stopped to enjoy the eclipse.

Gadi Schwartz reports on eclipse totality from plane above Arkansas
NBC News host Gadi Schwartz was high above Arkansas as the totality swept across the U.S.
Check out his unique view of this cosmic event:
Total Eclipse of the Heart Festival



Couples view the solar eclipse during a mass wedding in Russellville, Arkansas.
When is the next solar eclipse?
Caught the eclipse-chasing bug? Itâs not too early to start planning for the next one.
The next total solar eclipse will be in 2026, but it will mostly pass over the Arctic Ocean, with some visibility in Greenland, Iceland, Portugal and northern Spain. In 2027, a total solar eclipse will be visible in Spain and a swath of northern Africa.
The next total solar eclipse visible from North America will be in 2033, but only over Alaska. Then in 2044, a total solar eclipse will cross Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, parts of Canada and Greenland.
The next total solar eclipse to cross the continental U.S. coast-to-coast will occur in 2045. The path of totality for that eclipse will cut through California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia and Florida.
Eclipse wraps up in the U.S.
The solar eclipse has exited the United States and is continuing on its path over eastern Canada.
Maine was the last state in the country to experience totality.
In Indiana, the streetlights came on when the eclipse reached totality
BROWNSBURG, Ind. â When the eclipse reached totality here, the whole park cheered and the streetlights flashed on.
Some science enthusiasts near us looked through a high-powered telescope, and a group of children wrapped in glowsticks chased one another around a picnic blanket. It was idyllic.
Families in Ohio gather to watch the eclipse
LORDSTOWN, Ohio â The Mincks family watched in the parking lot of the Foxconn Electric Vehicle plant in Lordstown, Ohio.
Dan Mincks works at the plant, where his employer opened the parking lot up to the public. He was joined by his wife, Julie, and their three kids.
âAlmost like a thunderstorm rolled in. It was not what I expected,â Mincks said. âI donât have any words to describe what I expected. It just a total blackout.â

âIt was like a black hole,â 11-year-old Allison said.
Ray Grope, 75, of North Jackson, brought his great-granddaughter Emelia, 1, to the Foxconn EV plant parking lot in Lordstown, Ohio, where he worked until he retired when it was GM plant.
âI just called a neighbor and they stayed home to watch it,â said Grope, who was joined by his wife, Jennifer. âI called them and they said theyâre not seeing anything, and I told them youâve got to put the glasses on.â
Solar eclipse from space
The solar eclipse wasnât just a spectacle from the ground â satellites also caught the show from space.
The National Weather Serviceâs outpost in Boise, Idaho, posted a fascinating video on X showing the solar eclipse crossing the south-central United States. The shadow of the moon appears as a dark smudge charging northeast over the country.
'Like a cool summer night': Temperature drops as eclipse hits Cleveland
Totality swept the Midwest, cloaking Cleveland in darkness for a little under 4 minutes. Experience what those moments were like as temperatures dropped and afternoon turned to night.
Eagle Pass, Texas

People watch as the moon partially covers the sun during a total solar eclipse.Â
Cheering in Washington during peak eclipse
WASHINGTON â Some of the science lovers in the crowd had either a countdown going on their phone or the peak eclipse time of 3:20 p.m. lodged in their brain ahead of time.
But for most of the Fourth-of-July-fireworks-level crowd here, we knew we reached peak eclipse in D.C. when everyone started spontaneously cheering.


Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., observed the eclipse from the balcony of his office in the U.S. Capitol, surrounded by staff, talking with them about how part of his state is experiencing totality, while New York City is only experiencing a partial eclipse like the one he was watching.
âThis is magicalâ: Lester Holt and Tom Costello witness totality in Indianapolis
Watch as NBC Newsâ Lester Holt and Tom Costello witness the moment the solar eclipse reaches totality in Indianapolis.Â
Some light banter on X
The sun has been blocked â in the sky and on X, apparently.
NASAâs official account for the moon posted a cheeky screenshot âblockingâ the sun on the social media platform mid-solar eclipse and touting: "Oops I did it again."
Eclipse passes halfway point in path across the U.S.
The solar eclipse is more than halfway along its path across the country, with totality wrapping up in Indianapolis.
Next up: totality in Cleveland!
Animals active as eclipse reaches totality in Little Rock, Arkansas
NBC News climate reporter Chase Cain was in Little Rock for its totality, where an ecologist spoke to him about how the animals were reacting to the sudden darkness.
Total eclipse of the heart
RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. â Marriage is through sickness and in health, through lifeâs brightest moments and its darkest. But some want to get the darkest out of the way first.
Hundreds of couples from around the country have flocked to a Russellville, Arkansas, soccer field today to tie the knot at the very moment the moon covers the sun. All they needed was a marriage license â and a few minutes on this Monday afternoon â to take part. Call it a total eclipse of the heart.

Russellville is among the top places in the country to watch the solar eclipse: NASA is hosting part of its live broadcast from the city, and hundreds of thousands have traveled into town for the event.
Totality has come and gone in Dallas
DALLAS â Despite a forecast for cloudy skies, the weather cooperated and an eerie dusk slowly fell as the city entered totality.
For nearly 4 1/2 minutes, it looked like dusk. Eclipse-watchers looked up and clapped and cheered, but the birds were silent. The temperature â which has been in the 80s and a bit humid â also dropped.
Now that the moon is sliding aside, the birds are chirping once again.
Totality crosses Little Rock
The solar eclipse is moving over Arkansas at the moment, with totality starting to wrap up in Little Rock.
The eclipse will continue northeast, with millions more people awaiting their turn to experience a few minutes of darkness in the middle of the afternoon.
On the ground in Kerrville, Texas, as the totality passed over
NBC News correspondent Morgan Chesky spoke with a family as the moon blotted out the sun over Kerrville.
'Just amazing!': Solar eclipse watchers go wild as the moment of totality passes over Dallas
Totality has passed over Dallas.
Al Roker was there for the moment.
Spectators in New York City
People gathered at the Edge at Hudson Yards observation deck in New York City.


Totality underway in Eagle Pass and Kerrville, Texas
The moon is in its final stages of sliding between Earth and the sun over Eagle Pass and Kerrville, Texas, the first cities in the state (and the United States) to experience totality.
Viewers in these parts of the state will be treated to a little over 4 minutes of darkness â one of the longest stretches of totality in the United States.

Just a bite...
OAKLAND â Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, the moon only blocked about a third of the sun during our partial solar eclipse.
I took the colander from my kitchen out to the sidewalk to enjoy the strangely shaped shadows as the moon appeared to take a bite out of the circles of sunlight I'd normally expect to see through the holes.

Watch: Solar eclipse reaches totality in Mazatlán, Mexico
Mexicoâs Pacific coast was the first place in North America to experience totality during today's solar eclipse. Experience what it was like in Mazatlán as the moon slid into alignment with Earth and the sun.
The 2024 solar eclipse in photos
Check out a gallery of all the best pictures of the 2024 eclipse.
We'll be adding to this throughout the day as the moon casts its shadow across the U.S.



Stages of the solar eclipse
For people along the path of totality, there are some fun milestones to keep track of as the total solar eclipse unfolds.
As the eclipse progresses and it starts to get dark, look out for the âdiamond ring effectâ created by the last beams of sunlight. The sunâs atmosphere will appear as an illuminated halo, and the last light still visible will look like the diamond of a giant ring.

As the sunlight decreases even further, an effect known as Bailyâs beads will be created by the moonâs rugged terrain. Tiny âbeadsâ of light will be visible for only a few seconds around the dark moon, as the last bits of sunlight peer through the moonâs mountains and valleys.

When the moon is fully blocking the sun, it is safe to remove eclipse glasses and look at the total solar eclipse with the naked eye.
Spectators in Mexico
People gathered to watch the eclipse in Mazatlán, one of the first parts of North America to see the totality.


Sunlight dims in D.C.
WASHINGTON â Itâs 2:19 p.m., and the edge of the moon is visible in front of the sun â and it got just a tad dimmer and a tad cooler on the National Mall.
At first it seemed like it could have been one of the few fluffy white clouds in the sky, but then the cloud moved and the dimmer light stayed the same.
The crowds are a now a little quieter, and more people are looking up.
First views of totality
We're getting our first views of the total solar eclipse from Mazatlán in Mexico, as totality takes hold and darkens afternoon skies.


Ontario beach fills with telescopes, chairs and tents
FORT ERIE, Canada â Hundreds of people have gathered on Bay Beach in Fort Erie, located in the Canadian province of Ontario, to take part in this historic moment. The beach, one of eight designated eclipse viewing spots in Fort Erie, was dotted with telescopes and tents as observers hoped overcast skies would clear.
âIâm a big astronomy fan,â said Chung Zheng, who drove roughly two hours from Toronto with friends to observe the eclipse.

Zheng, 28, set up his own telescope on the beach.
âThis is a very rare event for us to have it so close,â he said. âWe wouldnât miss this opportunity for the world.â
Pinhole boxes at the ready
Here on the deck of the USS Intrepid, an aicraft-carrier-turned-museum that is hosting an eclipse event, some people have come prepared with pinhole projectors.
Susan Madison said she looked up how to make hers on YouTube.
"I never got glasses. I was afraid weâd get here and they would be out of them, so I looked up and found several different ways to make it," she said.

Karen Armas Landau has just returned from a trip to Peru and figured she'd skip doing anything for the eclipse. Now, she's on the flight deck and ready for the show.
"I just kept thinking about it and saying, 'Yeah, but itâs a solar eclipse,'" she said. "Iâve never seen any eclipse before."
A look at the eclipse from deep in the heart of (and above) Texas
NBC News host Gadi Schwartz is airborne to get a look at the eclipse from high above Texas. Here's a first look at his trip:
Eclipse begins in Cleveland
A partial eclipse is now visible in Cleveland! The bottom right corner of the sun is covered, making it look like an eyeball looking down from the skies.
President Biden: 'Don't be silly, folks'
President Joe Biden is getting in on the eclipse fun from the White House.
The nationâs capital is not in the eclipseâs path of totality, but the president nonetheless had an important reminder for anyone planning to look skyward and watch the moon partially or fully block the sunâs light today.
âAn eclipse is worth marveling at,â Biden wrote in a post on X. âBut donât be silly, folks â play it safe and wear protective eyewear.â
Thousands pack Indianapolis Motor Speedway to view eclipse
Nearly 50,000 people have descended on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to catch one of the area's best views of today's total solar eclipse.
Indianapolis is the biggest city in the eclipseâs path of totality outside of Texas.
Cloudy but hopeful in upstate New York
BROCKPORT, N.Y. â Crowds are gathering on the campus of SUNY Brockport in anticipation of todayâs total solar eclipse.
The college has been preparing for this day for more than three years and still even at this late hour they donât know what to expect. The cloudy skies at this point have kept the big crowds away, but there is still a significant group of eclipse watchers lined up on the center line of totality, which runs right through the campus and makes this a special vantage point.
The college has partnered with universities across the U.S. for research projects connected to the eclipse, and they have canceled classes for most of Monday so students can participate in eclipse-themed events.
The clouds are starting to break up, so when the eclipse rolls through they are hopeful this crowd will get the show they are looking for.

Natural reactions: How animals may behave during the eclipse
Wildlife may respond in various ways to the few minutes of darkness during totality. Jason Milks, a wildlife ecologist with The Nature Conservancy, says the reactions can be grouped into four categories: doing nothing, bedtime behavior, anxiety and possibly even mating.
And so it begins...
The solar eclipse has begun for viewers in Mexico, the first in North America to see the moon block the sun's light. The eclipse will cross into the United States over Texas next.

Retro in a day: Paraphenalia marks eclipse fervor
If you live in the path of totality, youâve probably seen more than your fair share of eclipse-themed potpourri.
From branded eclipse glasses and T-shirts at thrift stores to drinks at local bars, eclipse-themed (and apocalypse-themed) paraphernalia is all the rage.

A look behind the scenes as the eclipse begins
We are ready to go live for our very special eclipse coverage from control room 1A.Â
Lester Holt is live at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Tom Costello. Al Roker is in Dallas, and we have reporters out in the field from Mexico to Maine.Â

The view from our control room isn't bad either. Watching the sun through all of our cameras is extraordinary.
It's already busy on the National Mall
WASHINGTON â Itâs a lovely, sunny April day on the National Mall, and by 1:30 p.m. residents from across the DMV and beyond were already staking spots on the grass to watch the solar eclipse.
Itâs a Monday, but you wouldnât know it from the size of the crowds and the enthusiasm theyâre showing. It feels more like a busy Saturday â people are walking dogs, biking and setting up picnics with friends or their kids.

Periodic clumps of people are also gathering around tents from different Smithsonian museums, which are handing out eclipse glasses and information about how the eclipse happens.
An eclipse celebration generations in the making
MONROEVILLE, Ohio â Family, friends and neighbors are gathering in this rural town for an eclipse celebration directly in the path of the totality.
Three generations of the Sabo family have returned to the family farm, where the oldest generation was born, for the once-in-a-lifetime event. The gathering is getting underway with homemade chili cooked over the fire, along with custom eclipse-themed sugar cookies showing the stages of the eclipse made by Columbus-based bakery Momma Saboâs for the event.

A 'devil comet' is set to swing by the sun and could be visible during the eclipse
A âdevil cometâ known for its occasional outbursts is currently visible in the night sky, and lucky stargazers may even be able to spot the celestial object during the eclipse.
Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks was nicknamed the âdevil cometâ because an eruption last year left it with two distinct trails of gas and ice in the shape of devil horns.
A once-in-a-lifetime chance to witness 'syzygy'
New York City may not be in the path of totality for todayâs solar eclipse, but that hasnât dampened astrophysicist Mark Baraketâs enthusiasm for what he says is a once-in-a-lifetime event.
Baraket will be witnessing a partial solar eclipse from the deck of the Intrepid Museum, a converted aircraft carrier stationed on the west side of Manhattan.
"This is the forces of nature live at work: the moon in conjunction with the sun and the Earth," he said. "And by the way, they have a name for that. It's called 'syzygy.' That is a real word. If you played it in Scrabble, you get 25 points. ... It means all three objects are in perfect alignment."
Burlington is bustling
BURLINGTON, Vt. â Vermontâs largest city has rolled out the red carpet for visitors from all over who are anxious to see a rare total solar eclipse.
Burlingtonâs lakefront has been gradually filling up throughout the day, with tourists setting up telescopes, tents chairs and more. Many people are lining up at merchandise tents to get a souvenir to mark the occasion.

Jennifer Garland of Massachusetts said she missed the last total eclipse in 2017, so she was sure to have a spot early in the day right on Lake Champlain.
âI had cancer at the time,â Garland said, recalling 2017. âI couldnât travel. ⦠It killed me. These things are like once, maybe twice in a lifetime, and I donât want to miss it.â
As of noon, parking lots were quickly filling up and crowds were trekking along downtown Burlingtonâs sidewalks toward the lake for viewing.
Cloudy skies loom at Niagara Falls


People gather under overcast skies ahead of a total solar eclipse in Niagara Falls, Ontario. But Environment Canadaâs weather predictions for the afternoon donât look promising.
Al Roker previews NBC Newsâ solar eclipse coverage from Dallas
Ahead of today's total solar eclipse, Al Roker details NBC Newsâ coverage of the celestial event from the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas.
NBC correspondents will also be reporting live from Arkansas, Indiana, Ohio, New York, Maine and elsewhere along the eclipseâs path of totality.
Eclipse flights swarm airports: âWe had to close the runway to park planesâ
Mondayâs solar eclipse is giving some of the countryâs smaller airports their moment in the sun.
The Federal Aviation Administration reported arriving flights at airports from Burlington, Vermont, to southern Illinois were briefly halted on Monday morning ahead of the total eclipse.
Such disruptions are routinely caused by bad weather and heavy traffic in big-city hubs, but high demand for prime views of the phenomenon jammed some smaller airports on Monday. The best views of the solar eclipse in the U.S. span from Texas through Illinois, Kentucky and Ohio to northwestern New York and Maine, according to NASA.
A ground stop halts arrivals into an airport, giving a facility time to catch up and avoid airplane parking jams on the ground.
Some eclipse glasses recalled over safety concerns
Some eclipse glasses reportedly sold through Amazon have been recalled because they might not meet safety standards, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.
The recalled glasses were sold as "Biniki Solar Eclipse Glasses AAS Approved 2024 â CE & ISO Certified Safe Shades for Direct Sun Viewing (6 Packs)." In addition to online sales, they were available at several stores in southern Illinois.
The recalled glasses were labeled as âEN ISO 12312-1:2022,â according to the health department. Proper eclipse glasses should have the manufacturerâs name and address clearly labeled, along with the ISO logo and the code âIS 12312-2â printed on the inside.
âPeople in possession of the recalled glasses should not use them to view the eclipse,â the public health department said in a statement. âUsing inadequate eye protection could lead to serious eye damage.â
How birds and other wildlife may react to the eclipse
For wildlife, the sudden darkness of a total solar eclipse comes as a surprise. Birds might squawk to sound an alarm. Crickets start to chirp and owls hoot as if itâs nighttime.
Weâre at a nature preserve near Little Rock to witness how wildlife responds to the total eclipse.
How visually impaired people are participating in the eclipse from Ohio
People who are visually impaired can still participate in eclipse festivities in Cleveland, thanks to a "LightSound" device that converts light from the sun into noise.
âSo you hear the tone â brighter light is a higher pitch tone â and as the shadow passes over, itâs going to get lower and lower and lower until itâs just a series of clicks when itâs perfectly dark,â said Lindsay Deering, an information and education administrator at the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Staking out spots for the eclipse
From Mexico to Maine, people have already begun to snag choice viewing spots, hoping to catch a view of the solar eclipse.

Texas Eclipse Festival canceled due to severe weather
The Texas Eclipse Festival in Burnet has been canceled because of expected severe weather today through Wednesday, including the possibility of thunderstorms, hail, high winds and tornadoes.
âYour safety is our top priority. With the support and coordination of Burnet County officials, local safety agencies, and The National Weather Service, weâve agreed to end the festival today in a calm orderly manner,â event organizers said in a post on the festivalâs website.
Organizers said people can stay for the solar eclipse as long as they are prepared to depart after totality.
âThis guidance may change based on weather,â officials said.
Chasing eclipses from Hawaii to Indiana
Newton Chu traveled more than 4,000 miles to witness today's total solar eclipse.
Journeying from Hilo, Hawaii, to Indianapolis, it will be Chu's third time experiencing totality. He saw his first total solar eclipse in 1991 from the summit of Mauna Kea in Hawaii, at an altitude of 13,500 feet. In 2017, Chu traveled to Sun Valley, Idaho, and witnessed totality atop one of the local mountains.

This time around, Chu said he's hoping to do something a little different.
âMy goal is to see some planets this time, which Iâve never seen before in the daytime,â he said, adding that he'll be looking out for Saturn, Venus and even a rare comet that could be visible near Jupiter.
But ultimately, he wants to simply enjoy the experience of his third total solar eclipse. âHopefully Iâll try to stay in the moment,â he said.

Chu said traveling to see eclipses has given him a good excuse to experience celestial events in the great outdoors while surrounded by friends and family.
âItâs really something quite special,â he said.
Texas crowds hope clouds donât obscure solar eclipse
DALLAS â Itâs pretty cloudy here, but itâs still early! And you never know whatâs going to happen with the weather in Texas.That said, there is some expectation from forecasters that there could be some breaks in the clouds before storms roll in.
Explainer: What happens during a solar eclipse?
Eclipse mania is in full effect, but what exactly is taking place in the sky? NBC Newsâ Angie Lassman uses augmented reality technology to give a visual representation of what happens during a total solar eclipse.
William Shatner reflects on the âmagicalâ nature of a total eclipse
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. â William Shatner, the oldest person to ever visit space, will be on stage narrating the moments leading to totality at Indiana University this afternoon.
Sitting down with NBC News, he expressed the magical feeling an eclipse will will provide: "Itâs huge when you think about it. Celestial bodies are placing themselves between other celestial bodies."
But in combination with his fascination and curiosity about space, he advised humans âneed to do bothâ when it comes to tackling climate change on Earth and exploring space around our home planet.
"You have to have a focus on the most important part, which is staying alive. I mean, whatâs the point of going into space, if you canât come back, or you were overcome by the fumes?" he said. "No, weâre in a dire situation. Weâve got to clean up the environment and add our curiosity and our ambition to see whatâs out there."
Couple prepares for mass wedding in Arkansas

Bride and groom Kylee and Michael Rice prepare to take a hot air balloon ride before a planned mass wedding of over 200 couples at the "Total Eclipse of the Heart" festival in Russellville, Ark.
A second eclipse for Joe and Chris Scott
NEW SPRINGFIELD, Ohio â Joe Scott, 63, and Chris Scott, 62, of Fredericksburg, Virginia, are headed to see their second total solar eclipse, sporting T-shirts touting the feat.

The retired couple watched the 2017 eclipse at the zoo in Greenville, South Carolina. This time, they have tickets to watch from the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.
The pair had anticipated seeing the animals go wild at the zoo, but said instead most just went to sleep.
âEveryone told us the animals would be crazy. They actually just thought it was nighttime and went to sleep,â Joe Scott said while taking a break at an Ohio travel plaza. âAnd so now weâre going to the other extreme.â
âItâs going to be a party,â Chris Scott added.
Wider path of totality for 2024 eclipse
For this eclipse, the moon is a bit closer to Earth than it was during the 2017 total solar eclipse, meaning its path is wider, according to NASA.
It will also pass over more populated areas, giving about 19.6 million more people a chance to experience totality without having to travel.
But even if youâre not close to the path of totality, 99% of people in the U.S. will be able to see at least a partial solar eclipse, NASA says.
Totality is also expected to last longer for the 2024 eclipse â nearly 4½ minutes in parts of Texas â compared to 2017's longest period of 2 minutes and 42 seconds near Carbondale, Illinois.

Clouds loom over Kerrville
KERRVILLE, Texas â We're at the Kerrville eclipse festival in the park where at least 1,000 people have already set up their beach chairs and coolers.
This location is one of the first big towns in the U.S. that will see the eclipse starting at 2:32 p.m. ET. Thereâs still pretty heavy cloud cover, with loud cheers from the crowd whenever the sun has popped through.Â
Eclipse spectators line up at Indianapolis speedway
Eclipse watchers are headed to major events around the country, maybe none as big as Purdue University's watch party at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
NBC News' Lester Holt and Tom Costello will be there as well, providing live coverage as the totality passes overhead.


Eclipse watchers filing in to NASA event in Cleveland
CLEVELAND â Blue skies... at least for now! Crowds started filing through security at the Great Lakes Science Center around 10 a.m. ET. The expected crowd at this NASA event? Roughly 30,000.
Cleveland is one of the biggest cities in the path of totality today, with the free outdoor event featuring eclipse glasses, a "NASA Village" of exhibits, performances and screenings of two films.
Weddings, flights, cruises: How some plan to celebrate total eclipse
Along the path of totality, tens of millions are gathering for the out-of-this-world eclipse whose shadow will sweep across the United States. NBC News' Jesse Kirsch reports for "TODAY" on how people are celebrating, from hitting the slopes to getting married.
Cloud cover may clear along path of totality this afternoon
An updated forecast from the National Weather Service appears to show a lucky break in cloud cover for some cities along todayâs path of totality.
Kyle Struckmann, a national aviation meteorologist for the weather service at the FAA Command Center, detailed the weather outlook in a video posted on X. The forecast showed clouds over most of eastern Texas and stretching up into the Tennessee Valley, with more clouds from the Appalachians north to Detroit.
But he said those clouds will be moving east as the day progresses. By the time the eclipse starts crossing Texas, he said clouds may move out of the Dallas area, with conditions also appearing to clear over Arkansas, Missouri and Indiana.
Unfortunately for those in the Great Lakes region, Struckmann said afternoon clouds are forecast around Buffalo and other parts of upstate New York.
âOnce we get to New England, things will be very clear,â he said. âSo, very good viewing conditions for the eclipse expected up there.â
Traffic officials warn drivers about eclipse rubbernecking
April is the National Highway Traffic Safety Administrationâs Distracted Driving Awareness Month, and today promises to put its message to the test.
As the eclipse nears, the agency is urging drivers to keep their eyes on the road, not the sky, and to avoid pulling over in unsafe locations like the shoulders of highways and interstates (try a parking lot instead).
In Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine has activated the Ohio Emergency Operations Center, with his press secretary telling NBC News, âWhat weâre mostly concerned about is trafficâ throughout the state, where the path of totality extends from Dayton to Cleveland.

Further south, the Texas Department of Transportation is also telling drivers to keep moving. Airport officials have been preparing for visitor volumes to resemble those on a typical holiday weekend. Austin-Bergstrom International Airport has extra aviation department staffers on hand to keep ticket counters and security checkpoints running smoothly but has warned of long lines at rental car desks.
The small city of Perryville, Missouri, is also planning to head off backed-up roadways, but Perry County Sheriff Jason Klaus said his officers are doing âeverything we can not to use any kind of parking enforcement.â Theyâre hoping to hand out more free eclipse glasses than parking tickets; every patrol car will have an extra stash.
Former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino on what's special about today's eclipse
Former NASA astronaut Mike Massimino joined "TODAY" to talk about the science of the eclipse, as well as why it's an opportunity to gain a greater appreciation of our cosmic neighborhood.
For some 'umbraphiles,' eclipse chasing is a way of life
At 22, Ella Ross is among the younger members of a community of umbraphiles â a term that comes from the word umbra, the shadow cast by the moon as it blocks out the sun. These eclipse chasers dedicate their lives to tracking down eclipses around the world.
Three umbraphiles currently hold the record for witnessing total solar eclipses. Each of them has seen 33, but Ross plans on breaking that record in her lifetime.
âI know where Iâm going to be for the next solar eclipse and a couple more after that,â she said. âIâve planned where Iâm going to be up until 2098.â
Tyler Nordgren, an active member of the umbraphile community, has spent decades chasing eclipses. He has witnessed 10 total solar eclipses, gives lectures on the events and has led several umbraphile expeditions to remote locations.
âOnce people get captured by this, theyâll travel literally to the ends of the Earth,â he said. âIâve seen totality from a ship in the middle of the Atlantic and on a three-week trip from Spain to Barbados. I sailed to the Antarctic in 2021 to see a total solar eclipse, and Iâll be seeing it again from a fjord in Greenland in 2026.â
Nordgren is an astronomer and an artist, specializing in educational posters based on towns in the path of totality. Over the years, he has designed eclipse posters featuring places from Oregon to Maine.
This year, Nordgren partnered with New York State Parks to create the I Love NY total eclipse poster. He is spending totality on the shores of Lake Ontario, at Fair Haven Beach State Park, where he will be giving a talk during the eclipse.
How to best photograph the total solar eclipse on your phone
If youâre planning to bear witness to the rare eclipse, youâre probably getting your phone cameras ready. But have you ever tried taking a picture of the sky and noticed it didnât translate too well?
Here are some tips on how to best photograph todayâs celestial event with your phone â no professional cameras required!
Just as your eyes need eclipse glasses to see the eclipse, your phone camera lens might too.
- Try pressing your eclipse glasses close to your lens before totality, when the skies temporarily darken, to eliminate the light blooming. When totality happens, remove the filter or glasses â theyâre no longer needed.
- To focus your phoneâs camera on the eclipse, try using its focus lock feature. Tap your screen on where youâd like to focus, then hold until you see the yellow AE/AF LOCK alert. Your phone will now keep that area in focus.
- To minimize movement so you can get the clearest shot, use a tripod or your phoneâs timer mode.
This small Missouri city could cash in on the eclipse. Itâs trying hard not to.
Perryville, about 80 miles south of St. Louis, is in the path of totality stretching from Texas to Maine, where the shadow of the moon will fully obscure the sun for several minutes.
All along that swath, businesses large and small are looking to cash in. Delta Air Lines is running eclipse flights from Austin and Dallas to Detroit. Hotels were charging guests an average of $170 more yesterday than on the same day last year, according to travel technology company Amadeus. Tickets to an all-day sound healing retreat in Vermont have been going for $222 a pop.
But in Perryville, population 8,500, many businesses are vowing not to price-gouge visitors, hoping theyâll come back after the big event is over.

Tourists arrive early in the Northeast
Many eclipse tourists traveled to Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont over the weekend, making sure they arrived early and didnât have to fight last-minute traffic.
In Vermont, downtown Burlington had a Mardi Gras vibe yesterday,as people packed the pedestrian mall.
And as early as Saturday in Maine, things were already getting pretty wild in Houlton, including a group of people in alien costumes seen making their way through the streets. Numerous people shared photos of cars decorated with eclipse messaging.
No eclipse glasses? Here's how to make a pinhole projector
If you haven't been able to get your hands on eclipse glasses, there's still a way to watch the eclipse.
Check out this video that walks you through how to make a pinhole projector, which let's you watch the event without risking your retinas.
Dallas libraries to help visually impaired experience eclipse using sound
The Dallas Public Library will help those who might not be able to completely see the solar eclipse get a sense of it through sound, it said.
Four branches of the library system will use "LightSound" devices developed at Harvard University for the blind and low-vision community. The Dallas Public Library said Harvard donated the devices.
They emit a musical tone that changes as the eclipse progresses, according to the university, which said they were developed specifically so the visually impaired to experience eclipses.
They use "sonification" to convert data into sounds, according to Harvard.
Library officials said LightSound devices will be available at four library locations during the eclipse: the Lakewood, Prairie Creek, Preston Royal and Vickery branches.
Map shows red-hot Airbnb demand along eclipse path
Data from short-term rental tracking site AirDNA shows the huge demand for short-term bookings in cities and towns located along the eclipse path last night.
In an interview with NBC News, AirDNA chief economist Jamie Lane said that listings within the band on Airbnb and VRBO, which AirDNA tracks, were effectively sold out as of Wednesday.

Thatâs true even for larger cities such as Dallas (more than 95% booked), Cleveland (more than 97% booked), and the Buffalo and Niagara Falls area (more than 98% booked).
Lane said rates for listings are elevated, but he did not offer specific figures. He said the total the volume of listings had declined from the average â likely, he said, because second-home owners chose to take advantage of their properties themselves for the big event.
Todayâs storms forecast
Severe storms are expected today across portions of the totality path, with 16 million people across most of Texas, southern Oklahoma, and small parts of Arkansas and Louisiana under severe weather risks.Â
The storms will start around 3 to 4 p.m. local time and will last through the night, forecast to bring rain and the greatest risks of destructive softball-sized hail up to 4 inches in diameter, damaging wind gusts of over 60 mph and isolated tornadoes.
Tomorrow, 21 million people are at risk across much of Texas again and most of Louisiana with risks of very large hail and tornadoes.
A total of 3 million people are under flood watches across parts of northeast Texas, southern Arkansas and northwest Louisiana. Rainfall amounts in the next 24-72 hours could be a widespread 3-5 inches with locally higher amounts up to 8 inches.
What the eclipse looks like from the skies
Good morning! We are headed to the airport for some final checks.
We are taking two jets up to track the eclipse. The first will be carrying a state-of-the-art 8K high-speed camera that was used in the filming of "Top Gun."
Weâll be in the second jet flying on its wing as we approach the eclipse. The first jet will then break off to the Northeast as the eclipse approaches and will try to lock its camera onto the 118-mile-wide umbra.
We will break left, head straight into the eclipse and ride totality as long as possible. Should be the ride of a lifetime!
Photographers stake out their positions at Niagara Falls

In New York, eclipse viewing party takes over aircraft carrier deck
This morning, we are onboard the flight deck of the historic USS Intrepid for its solar eclipse viewing party.
The flight deck is poised to be one the prime viewing spots for the eclipse.
The museumâs fee is $36, half off for New York City residents.
NYCâs only aircraft carrier museum has commissioned 6,000 viewing glasses for the expected crowds. Although NYC is not in the path of totality, we are expecting somewhere around a 90% partial eclipse, and thatâs enough for those hoping to get a (safe) glimpse of this cosmic confluence.
Eclipse safety 101
There's plenty to love about a cosmic event like today's eclipse, but keep in mind a couple safety precautions for your family and your pets:
Tens of millions gather to view the eclipse
As many as 31 million people live within the path of totality, which stretches in a diagonal line from Mexico, through Texas, Arkansas, Kentucky, Ohio, New York and Maine.Â
Newton Chu and his family traveled to Indianapolis to view the spectacle from Hawaii â their third eclipse sighting since 1991.Â
âI think it is a little emotional,â he said, noting that there are people often seen with tears in their eyes over witnessing âa phenomena of nature.â
Along the path, police expect highway gridlocks.Â
âWe were told to compare it to 30 Super Bowls letting out at the same time,â Pennsylvania State Troop Capt. Kirk Reese said. âDonât stop on the highway to view the eclipse. Donât stop in the roadway. Turn your headlights on. Be safe.âÂ
The last U.S. city in the path of totality prepares for the eclipse
HOULTON, Maine â Everybody's ready, even George Washington.
After a weekend of festivities â science demonstrations, movies and gatherings culminating in fireworks Sunday night â this small Maine town in the path of totality will be focused on today's eclipse.
Houltonâs population is just under 5,000. But hundreds of eclipse-chasing tourists have arrived already, and more are expected today.Â

In a corner store turned eclipse information center, folks are invited to put a pin on the map representing where theyâre from. Most are from New England but there are pins from as far away as California and Washington State. Someone drew on Australia and pinned it.
Locals are excited too. This is the first full eclipse here since 1963. And back then, there were clouds and storms and a lot of disappointment. Today, we may just have the best forecast on the entire path of totality. There are thin clouds now but this afternoon bright sunshine is predicted.Â
On the local station WHOU 100.1, the DJs are talking about how this eclipse has brought everyone together and the most noticeable thing is the âloudness of smilesâ everywhere.Â
âEverybody in this town is gonna be connected⦠because weâre gonna be eclipse buddies.â
Scientists gear up to run experiments during solar eclipse
The eclipse is a rare opportunity for scientists to study the Earth, the moon and the sun âin entirely different ways than we usually do,â according to Pam Melroy, NASAâs deputy administrator.
One of the agencyâs main priorities will be to observe the sunâs outer atmosphere, or the corona, which normally canât be seen because the star is too bright. During a total solar eclipse, the corona comes into view as faint wisps around a glowing halo when the moon blocks light from the sunâs surface.
âThings are happening with the corona that we donât fully understand, and the eclipse gives us a unique opportunity to collect data that may give insights into the future of our star,â Melroy said in a news briefing.
Scientists are interested in the corona because it plays a key role in transferring heat and energy into the solar wind, the constant stream of charged particles released from the sunâs outer atmosphere. The solar wind ebbs and flows, occasionally shooting high-powered solar flares into space. These can hit Earth with electromagnetic radiation, which can cause radio blackouts and knock out power grids.
Eclipse day forecast
Clouds will increase ahead of severe thunderstorms expected across portions of the totality path from Texas to Arkansas today â but the good news is that the storms are expected to erupt after the totality ends.Â
There will be high cirrus clouds â which are thin, wispy and transparent â along much of the eclipse path, but these clouds are not enough to totally obscure the view. Itâs the mid, low-level clouds that will obscure more of the eclipse.Â
Here are cloud cover forecasts by city:
KERRVILLE, Texas: 89%
Low clouds: 53%
Mid clouds: 76%
High clouds: 100%
DALLAS, Texas: 66%
Low clouds: 19%
Mid clouds: 49%
High clouds: 87%
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.: 11%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 0%
High clouds: 27%
CARBONDALE, Ill.: 54%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 39%
High clouds: 81%
BLOOMINGTON, Ind.: 68%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 26%
High clouds: 92%
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.: 59%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 17%
High clouds: 89%
CLEVELAND, Ohio: 59%
Low clouds: 21%
Mid clouds: 0%
High clouds: 90%
BROCKPORT, N.Y.: 98%
Low clouds: 97%
Mid clouds: 87%
High clouds: 0%
HOULTON, Maine: 0%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 0%
High clouds: 0%
NEW YORK, N.Y.: 28%
Low clouds: 0%
Mid clouds: 63%
High clouds: 13%
Cloudy skies forecast for some â but not all â in eclipse's path
NBC Newsâ meteorologist Michelle Grossman has the latest weather forecast for todayâs total eclipse. The East Coast is looking pretty clear, but the Gulf Coast is predicted to have a lot of cloud cover.
Clouds and storms may obscure solar eclipse view in states along its path
Clouds and storms may potentially obscure views of todayâs total solar eclipse in states along the path of totality in the southern Plains and the western Gulf Coast.
Around 20 million people in Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma are at risk for severe weather at the start of the week, where multiple rounds of storms are forecast to start this afternoon. Very large hail will be the primary threat heading into today, with the threat shifting tomorrow across east Texas and Louisiana. Texas will see the most impact, with major cities including Houston, Dallas, Austin and San Antonio in the path of the storms.
In Dallas, storms are forecast to start between 3 and 4 p.m. CT, after the eclipse is expected around 1:30 p.m. CT. In Kerrville and Junction, the storms could start between 1 and 2 p.m., but they would likely be isolated in nature and only just getting started by that time.

Eclipse is Texasâ first since 1878
DALLAS â For many lifelong Texans, this could be the first total solar eclipse theyâve seen â itâs the first to pass over the state since 1878.
The 2017 total solar eclipse, the last one visible in the U.S., crossed over an arc of states stretching from Oregon to South Carolina. But this time, parts of Texas (and other states, of course) get a chance to be in the shadow.
Totality starts at 1:27 p.m. local time in Eagle Pass, on the border with Mexico. It is expected to begin in Dallas at 1:40 p.m. and end at 1:44 p.m.
Letâs hope the weather cooperates.

Mother-daughter eclipse chasers plan to enjoy the event close to home
In 2017, Debra Ross and her daughter, Ella, drove 14 hours from their home in Rochester, New York, to rural Missouri to see the total solar eclipse.
Today, another total solar eclipse is passing right over their hometown.
Ross and her daughter are part of a community of eclipse chasers, people who travel across the world to experience these cosmic events. After today, the duo will have seen two solar eclipses and they plan to chase many more.
Ross said that her experience during the 2017 eclipse changed her life.
âIn the minute and half of totality, I was only aware of four bodies in the entire universe,â she told NBC News. âThe sun, the moon, the Earth and me. I got what all the hype was about and came out of that completely transformed.â
Ross, who is the co-chair of the American Astronomical Societyâs eclipse task force, has been preparing for the eclipse in Rochester, which falls in the path of totality, for years.
âThe excitement is absolutely palpable in Rochester,â she said.
Special glasses needed to safely view the eclipse
Glasses made specifically for looking at the sun offer the only safe way to view the eclipse directly.
âEclipse glasses are very important to prevent photothermal injury to the retina, and not just any old glasses â they have to be eclipse glasses with the ISO 12312-2 filter,â said Dr. Nicole Bajic, a comprehensive ophthalmologist at the Cleveland Clinic Cole Eye Institute.
The glasses are âthousands of times darkerâ than sunglasses, according to NASA.
Without such precautions, watching the eclipse can cause permanent eye damage.
âItâs called solar retinopathy, and itâs damage to very sensitive, intricate cells that make up the retina, which is the lining of the back of the eye, and thatâs what transmits light into electrical signals so that we can see what we see,â Bajic said. âAnd when we have damage from the sun to that tissue, we can get decreased vision and central blind spots in our vision.â

What is a total solar eclipse?
Todayâs cosmic event is one of two types of eclipses: lunar and solar. So what makes a solar eclipse? NBC Newsâ Zinhle Essamuah explains:
Your last-minute guide to the total solar eclipse
A total solar eclipse will cross North America today, offering millions a rare opportunity to see afternoon skies temporarily darken as the moon blocks the face of the sun.
Need to catch up quick? This guide will tell you what you need to know, including fun milestones to look for if youâre lucky enough to be in the path of totality and how to view the eclipse safely.
It's finally here!
Good morning and happy Great American Eclipse Day!
Our live updates throughout the day will include reporting from across NBC News as the eclipse crosses the country.