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Eclipse Calculator

Location
Nanded, Maharashtra, India
Timezone
UTC+5:30
🌑🌞

Annular Solar Eclipse

17th February 2026
Not visible at your location

No need to take precautions or follow religious eclipse rules as eclipse is not visible at this location

🌑

Total Lunar Eclipse

3rd March 2026
Visible at your location
For religious activities:
Eclipse Starts:06:25:41 PM (Moonrise)
Eclipse Ends:06:47:18 PM
Maximum Eclipse:05:03:42 PM
Total duration:21m 37s
Penumbral eclipse is not considered for religious activities
Moonrise:06:25:41 PM
Moonset:06:59:46 AM +1
Penumbral Begins:02:14:25 PM
Penumbral Ends:07:53:08 PM
Umbral Begins:03:20:06 PM
Umbral Ends:06:47:18 PM
Totality Begins:04:34:34 PM
Totality Ends:05:32:51 PM
Umbral Magnitude:1.15
Penumbral Magnitude:2.184
Umbral Duration:3h 27m 11s
Penumbral Duration:5h 38m 42s

Sutak Period

Sutak Starts
09:25:57 AM
Sutak Ends
06:47:18 PM

During Lunar Eclipse, Sutak is observed for 3 Prahars before Eclipse and ends when eclipse ends. There are total 8 Prahars from Sunrise to Sunrise. Hence Sutak duration is calculated based on actual sunrise to sunrise period.

🌑🌞

Total Solar Eclipse

12th August 2026
Not visible at your location

No need to take precautions or follow religious eclipse rules as eclipse is not visible at this location

🌗

Partial Lunar Eclipse

28th August 2026
Not visible at your location

No need to take precautions or follow religious eclipse rules as eclipse is not visible at this location

Note: Eclipse times are shown in local timezone. Actual visibility depends on weather and location.

About Eclipses

Solar eclipses happen when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun; lunar eclipses happen when the Moon passes through Earth's shadow. This calculator lists eclipses for your selected year and shows times in your chosen location's timezone. Types: • Solar: Total—the Sun is fully covered; partial—only part of the Sun is covered; annular—the Moon is farther away, so a thin ring (annulus) of the Sun remains. • Lunar: Penumbral—the Moon passes through Earth's faint outer penumbra; partial—part of the Moon enters the dark umbra; total—the full Moon lies in the umbra. How to read the timings: • Visibility at your location: Labels show whether the eclipse is visible where you are. Geometry, sunrise/sunset, and moonrise/moonset all matter; a global eclipse may still be invisible from your site. • Local clock times: We use your location's timezone (including typical DST rules). Clear skies and an open horizon still affect what you actually see. • Religious / ritual use: Traditions differ. Many do not treat penumbral lunar eclipses like umbral ones. Solar rules often depend on the eclipse being seen after sunrise or finishing before sunset. The notes under each eclipse summarize how this app marks those cases. • Contacts and phases: Solar listings may show first through fourth contact; lunar listings use penumbral and umbral begin/end—these mark the astronomical phase boundaries.