When will the next lunar and solar eclipse happen again?


Question:
i just want to know the dates so i can see it next time. thanks!

Answer:
Total Lunar Eclipse: August 28, 2007
The second lunar eclipse of 2007 will be a dandy for observers in central and western North America before and during dawn on this date. Totality runs from 9:52 to 11:22 UT (2:52 a.m. to 4:22 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time). Again, compare these times with your local times of moonset and sunrise.

Observers near the West Coast will see the event in full, including all of the partial phases and the 90 minutes of totality. For the eastern US and Canada and much of South America, the show will be cut short as the Moon sets and the Sun rises.

Partial Solar Eclipse: September 11, 2007
The last eclipse of the year will be visible only from Antarctica and parts of South America. Greatest eclipse (75% of the way to total) occurs in the South Ocean at 12:31 UT. Early risers in much of southern South America will see the Sun partially blocked during and/or soon after sunrise.

The next total eclipse of the Sun will cross parts of northern Asia on August 1, 2008.

It's been a while since North America experienced a total solar eclipse of the Sun, and don't hold your breath; the next crossing populated areas will come on August 21, 2017.
Total Lunar Eclipse: 2007 Aug 28
Partial Solar Eclipse: 2007 Sep 11
Good luck being in the right location for a solar eclispe, lunars can be seen from many places. Next Total Eclispe is in Aug 2008
Total Lunar Eclipse: 2007 Aug 28
Partial Solar Eclipse: 2007 Sep 11
Source(s):

http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/ec...
Lunar eclipse August 28, visible from western North America and the entire Pacific region (assuming the sky is clear)
Solar eclipse--a partil on September 11, 2007 visible from the lower part of South America, best seen along the Chile-Arngetine border
Annular, February 7, 2008, from Antarctica
Total--August 1, 2008, from Greenland, Russia, Mongolia, and China
Lunar eclipses can be obtained at http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/le...
solar eclipses from http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/js...
These cover from 2000 BC to 3000 AD.
Everyone is posting the same link:
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/oh...

I highly suggest it, too. It has links to show you where each eclipse will be seen and when the best time to see it is.

Good luck! Watch safely!
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