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When is the next total solar eclipse in the U.S. after today? See the paths for the 2044 and 2045 events

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Eclipse-watchers have been waiting more than six years since the last time a total solar eclipse charted its way across the United States, in 2017. After the rare event arrives on April 8, be aware — the next chance won’t be coming around any time soon. 

Viewers in what’s called “the path of totality” will see the moon completely block the sun — an opportunity those in North America won’t have again for 20-plus years. The next total solar eclipses in North America are not anticipated until 2044 and 2045.

“A total solar eclipse is one of the most spectacular things anyone can see in their lifetime,” Virginia Tech astrophysicist Nahum Arav told CBS News. The eclipse “looks like a black hole in the sky,” said Arav, who watched the paths of totality of eclipses in 1991 and 2017.   

The total eclipse of the sun. The rays of light appear as
A total eclipse of the sun occurs when the moon passes between Earth and the sun, briefly blocking the sun from view.

Will Powers/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images


Today’s eclipse will start to appear mid-morning around 11:07 a.m. PDT on the Pacific Coast of Mexico, then move into Texas. The eclipse’s visibility is predicted to track through 15 states — Oklahoma, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, VermontNew Hampshire and Maine, among them — before heading northward into Canada and then exiting North America.

If the weather is clear, millions of people from coast to coast will be able to see a partial solar eclipse, in which the moon partially covers the sun. However, only those within the path of totality and will experience the darkness of the total solar eclipse. 

When is the next total solar eclipse in the U.S. after the 2024 eclipse?

Solar eclipses happen about twice a year, said Arav. “Eclipses happen all over the Earth evenly,” he told CBS News — but noted the timings when they occur are not regular. That means eclipses can occur within just a few years, or every few decades, in North America.

Before the eclipse in 2017, the last total solar eclipse to cross North America was in 1979. That was the first eclipse whose path of totality crossed the entire continent in 99 years. 

Even though eclipses may seem to occur randomly, scientists can pinpoint exactly when and where they will happen.

“There is no ambiguity, as we know exactly where it will land,” said Arav. 

There will be eight total solar eclipses visible from North America in the 21st century, Arav said, with one occurring about every 12 years, on average.   

The next total solar eclipse to cross North America is predicted to occur on Aug. 23, 2044, NASA said. However, the path of totality from this eclipse will only touch three states, according to The Planetary Society, a nonprofit organization dedicated to public interest in space.  

This next eclipse will mainly be observed in Canada, Arav said. 

Path of totality for the 2044 total solar eclipse

The 2044 eclipse will start in Greenland on Aug. 23, 2044, and will continue its path through Canada. 

The 2044 total solar eclipse will be short, mostly appearing in Canada. It will be visible from three states in the U.S.: Montana, Nroth Dakota and South Dakota.  

The path of totality will cross Williston and Dickinson, North Dakota, and Great Falls, Montana.

Map showing the path of the 2044 total solar eclipse from Greenland, Canada and parts of the United States.

Path of totality for the 2045 total solar eclipse

The next solar eclipse that crosses a significant portion of the continental U.S. will be in 2045, said Arav. That year, a solar eclipse will darken skies in parts of the U.S., Haiti, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Guyana, French Guiana, Suriname and Brazil. 

In North America, the 2045 total eclipse will be visible in many states as it moves from coast to coast. The eclipse will start in California and move east to end in Florida, similar to 2017, Arav said. 

There will be numerous U.S. cities where eclipse watchers can view the total eclipse, including Reno, Nevada; Colorado Springs, Colorado; and Orlando, Florida.

United states map showing the path of the 2045 solar eclipse.

Future solar eclipses in North America after 2045

Scientists have predicted eight total solar eclipses will appear in North America in the 21st century.

“Natural phenomena are like a Swiss clock,” Arav said. We know exactly when and where they will appear.”

After the 2044 and 2045 total solar eclipses, the next total eclipses in North America will occur in 2078 and 2099.

May 11, 2078

This total solar eclipse on May 11, 2078, will pass over the southern United States.

Cities include:

Atlanta, Georgia

New Orleans, Louisiana

Charlotte, North Carolina

Virginia Beach, Virginia

Sept. 14, 2099

This total solar eclipse on Sept. 14, 2099, will cross a wide swath of the United States.

Cities include:

Minneapolis, Minnesota

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Chicago, Illinois

Columbus, Ohio

Fargo, North Dakota



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Chinese trans woman awarded thousands over forced electroshock “conversion therapy” hopes for change

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A transgender woman in China who recently won 60,000 yuan (roughly $8,300) in compensation from a hospital that forced her to undergo several rounds of electroshock “conversion therapy” has told CBS News that she hopes her experience will herald change for the LGBTQ+ community in her country. 

“I hope that the transgender community will soon have safeguard measures and basic human rights, and will no longer be victimized by medical treatment,” said the 28-year-old performance artist who goes by the pseudonym Ling’er.

screenshot-2024-11-25-at-13-27-59.png
Chinese trans woman Ling’er was awarded thousands over forced electroshock therapy.

Ling’er


Ling’er was admitted to a hospital about a year after coming out to her parents as transgender, she previously told the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper. She said in that interview that her parents were “very opposed” to her gender identity and “felt that I wasn’t mentally stable. So they sent me to a mental hospital.”

In the hospital, Ling’er was diagnosed with an “anxiety disorder and discordant sexual orientation,” she told the Guardian. She said she was held for 97 days and subjected to seven sessions of electroshock treatment.

“It caused serious damage to my body,” Ling’er said. “Every time I underwent the treatment, I would faint… I didn’t agree to it, but I had no choice.”

Ling’er said  the electric shocks caused her to develop heart problems, which she now requires medication to treat.

The hospital “tried to ‘correct me’, to make me conform to society’s expectations,” Ling’er told the Guardian.

The hospital declined to comment when approached by the Guardian.

There is a legal ambiguity surrounding so-called conversion therapy for LGBTQ people in China. The government removed homosexuality from an official list of psychiatric disorders in 2001, but a diagnosis for distress about sexual orientation remained on the books until recently.

A 2017 Human Rights Watch report urged the Chinese government to prevent hospitals and other medical facilities from subjecting LGBTQ people to conversion therapies. HRW said many victims of these therapies in China were forcibly brought to hospitals by their families.

“I feel good, I won my case,” Ling’er told CBS News. “I hope that my case will be useful for transgender cases in China.”



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Retail credit card interest rates hit all-time high

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Retail credit card interest rates hit all-time high – CBS News


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The average rate on credit cards from some of America’s biggest retailers has soared to an all-time high of more than 30%, according to personal finance site Bankrate. That’s up from just over 24% in 2021. CBS News MoneyWatch correspondent Kelly O’Grady has a look at the rates.

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Menendez Brothers to appear in court in hearing that could bring them closer to release

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Menendez Brothers to appear in court in hearing that could bring them closer to release – CBS News


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Erik and Lyle Menendez, who are serving life sentences for the 1989 murder of their parents, will appear virtually in court Monday for a hearing addressing the brothers’ habeas corpus petition that seeks to vacate their murder convictions for lesser charges like manslaughter. CBS News correspondent Elise Preston has the latest.

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