Solar Eclipse 2021: What Time Is the Partial Eclipse More Visible?
The sun is seen in full eclipse over a park on August 21, 2017 in Hiawatha, Kansas. Millions of people have flocked to areas of the U.S. that are in the "path of totality" in order to experience a total solar eclipse. Jamie Squire/Getty Images

A partial eclipse is set to be seen in the skies in areas of Europe, Asia, and North America this week, with the mooning passing between the sun and Earth.

The direct path of the eclipse will be in Northern Canada, Greenland, and Siberia. Astronomers said these areas will be seeing the annular eclipse, according to The Wall Street Journal report.

An annular eclipse is when the moon covers the central portion of the sun to give out an appearance as a bright circular fringe of sunlight surrounding a dark disk.

Meanwhile, those areas off the path of the eclipse will be seeing a partial eclipse, such as New York, Philadelphia, and Toronto.

Montreal and Boston will be seeing something that appears to be a shark's fin figure from the eclipse.

When And How to Watch The Solar Eclipse

The ring of fire solar eclipse will be happening on June 10, Thursday.

People can watch it live online with several live webcasts. People can also watch it outside in areas where the solar eclipse will be most visible.

However, it is advised to wear proper eye protection, according to a Space report.

People will be seeing the moon takes a "bite" out of the sun at 4:12 a.m. depending on where you are located.

People living in the north and east of a line running around from Edmonton, Alberta, to Des Moines, Iowa, down through Savannah, Georgia will be seeing a partial eclipse.

The maximum eclipse will be visible at 6:41 a.m. in the north polar region. The annular phase will last around three minutes and 51 seconds.

ISO-approved solar-eclipse glasses have standards and safety requirements such as having no more than 0.00032 percent of the sun's light may be transmitted through the filters.

The filters must also be free from any defects, according to another Space report.

Annular Eclipse

Annular eclipses happen every couple of eclipse, wherein the moon is far enough from Earth that it does not cover the whole sphere of the sun, emitting a ring glowing surface.

A thin circular strip of the glowing sun remains once the moon obstructs the front of the sun, creating what is called the "ring of fire."

This June's eclipse will leave 11 percent of the photosphere still exposed, according to The New York Times report.

The same kind of incident was visible in December 2019 in the Middle East, South, and Southeast Asia.

Mike Kentrianakis said that the last time a crescent sunrise happened in New York was 1875.

Kentrianakis was the Eclipse Project Manager for the American Astronomical Society during the big eclipse in 2017.

Annular eclipses are valuable for professional astronomers for observing the next total eclipse. Studying total eclipses is the best chance astrophysicists on Earth have to study the dynamics at the sun's surface.

The current eclipse will be moving north, crossing over the North Pole before heading south. This is explained by its occurrence near the summer solstice when the northern half of the plant is close to its most extreme angle toward the sun.

WATCH: Partial solar eclipse to be visible over parts of North America - from Global News