- Viewers on the West Coast will get the best show. For them the entire eclipse will be visible from start to finish before moonset in the early morning hours of Tuesday, August 28, 2007.
- Hawaiians will be able to see the full eclipse, or totality, around midnight.
- For viewers on the East Coast and in the Great Lakes States, the eclipse will start around dawn and will still be occurring when the Sun rises and the Moon sets that morning.
- Finally, across the Mid-West, Plains, and Rocky Mountain States the totality has already ended before the Moon sets and viewers there will only see a partial eclipse as the Moon emerges from the shadow of the Earth.
what does that mean for the east coast???
I probably wont see it anyway because theres too many houses next to me and the moon moves pretty fast... I can see it now but who knows where it will be in 2 houres???? ... an astronomer?