The first solar eclipse of 2023 will span Australia and Southeast Asia into the Pacific Ocean region.

Mark your calendars. The first eclipse season of 2023 is about to begin on Thursday 20 April, with a rare hybrid annular-total solar eclipse.

Editor's note: If you're not lucky enough to be in the path of this eclipse, watch via the livestream below:

A Solar Eclipse Primer

Eclipses occur when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, casting its shadow across the surface of the planet.

The Moon's path is inclined five degrees relative to the ecliptic plane, and misses the Sun on most passes. Otherwise, we'd see two eclipses – one lunar and one solar – per month.

For an eclipse season to occur, new and full moon need to fall very near an intersection node of the Moon's orbit and the ecliptic. This happens about twice a year.

Total eclipses occur when the Moon completely covers the Sun, plunging those standing in the shadow of the Moon into an eerie darkness and revealing the pearly white solar corona. This is the kind of eclipse most folks will get on a plane and head to an exotic location for.

Though we often marvel at how the Moon seems to be a great fit versus the Sun as seen from Earth, this isn't always the case. If new moon is headed towards apogee and the Sun is a few months within perihelion, the inner umbral shadow fails to reach the surface of the Earth, and an annular eclipse occurs. Observers are then treated to a brilliant 'ring of fire' eclipse.

Animation showing the path of a total solar eclipse passing over Western Australia and Southeast Asia.
Animation for the April 20 eclipse. (NASA/GSFC/A.T. Sinclair)

A Bizarre Hybrid Solar Eclipse

But something stranger still happens on April 20. The Moon's umbral shadow barely brushes the Earth on one part of the track, only to liftoff again on the other. This is the hybrid portion of the eclipse, which transitions from a broken annular, to totality, then back to annular again.

Panel of three images showing different types of solar eclipses, where the Sun is fully or partially obscured by the Moon.
Types of solar eclipses: total (left), annular (center) and partial (right). (NASA/Joseph Matus/Bill Dunford/Bill Ingalls)

The 49-kilometer-wide path touches down at sunrise over the Indian Ocean. The eclipse only brushes land briefly at three points.

First landfall occurs over the extreme northwestern tip of Australia along the Ningaloo Coast and the tiny town of Exmouth. The shadow then crosses the Timor Sea and touches the eastern tip of the island nation of East Timor near the capital of Dili, and then crosses a scattering of Indonesian islands including Kisar, the Schouten Islands, and Western New Guinea.

Maximum duration for totality is only 1 minute and 16 seconds, just south of the Indonesian island of East Timor in the Timor Sea.

A Rare (and Remote) Event

How rare is a hybrid eclipse? Well, there are only seven hybrid eclipses in the 21st century, or 3.1 percent of solar eclipses overall.

Annulars are actually more common than totals in the current epoch, and will continue to become even more so over the next few hundred million years as the Moon slowly recedes from Earth, until all central solar eclipses are elusively annular.

"The 20 April 2023 hybrid solar eclipse is notable in that it is longer in duration than most annular-totals, and is the longest until 17 October 2172," eclipse-chaser and researcher Michael Zeiler told Universe Today.

"There is some true annularity at the end of the central path just before sunset, but with a brief duration of just over 4 seconds of annularity. This eclipse will have a total of about 2,920 kilometers of broken annularity."

Solar eclipses are more common than you'd think throughout the Solar System. Rovers on Mars routinely witness misshapen annular eclipses courtesy of the small Martian moons Deimos and Phobos.

Also, head to the surface of Jupiter's major moons, and you'd see total solar eclipses featuring a sharp fit similar to Earth's during mutual transit season.

Viewing the Eclipse

Though few folks live along the central path of next week's eclipse, millions across Australia and Southeast Asia will be treated to partial views from around the path. You'll need to practice proper eclipse safety during all partial phases on the eclipse, and use approved ISO 12312-2 glasses for viewing.

Partial phases extend from Australia through Southeast Asia. Here are the circumstances for select cities in the region:

Illustration depicting view of solar eclipse from four cities in Southeast Asia and Australia.
Views from around the region at mid-eclipse. (Stellarium)

Singapore – 3:55 UT-15.6 percent maximum obscuration, with the Sun at 70.5 degrees altitude.

Manila – 4:55 UT-23.7 percent maximum obscuration, with the Sun at 74.5 degrees altitude.

Darwin – 4:22 UT-80.7 percent maximum obscuration, with the Sun at 61 degrees altitude.

Jakarta – 3:45 UT-39 percent maximum obscuration, with the Sun at 66 degrees altitude.

Eclipse Season…and Beyond

This first eclipse season is book-ended with a subtle penumbral lunar eclipse on May 5 favoring Africa, Asia, and Australia. This is also the last total solar eclipse until the big one. We're talking about the Great North American total solar eclipse spanning Mexico, the United States, and Canada in just under a year on 8 April 2024.

Don't miss the first eclipse of the year. We'll note if any live webcasts for the April 20 eclipse turn up. Don't miss the show, either from the hybrid annular-total path, or from the partial stage region.

This article was originally published by Universe Today. Read the original article.