The next solar eclipse will grace the afternoon and early evening skies over much of the United States this Sunday (May 20), offering up a spectacular site for those lucky enough to see it. A solar eclipse occurs when the moon gets directly between Earth and the sun. Sunday’s event will be an partial solar eclipse across most of the United States and Canada, and a more compelling annular solar eclipse for a narrow swath of residents in the West and Southwest. The sun sets before any of it will be visible from the East Coast, however. During the annular eclipse, the moon will be analogous to a black dime in front of a shiny penny, with a thin “ring of fire” — sunlight that streams around the moon. Annular eclipses occur when the moon as at or near its farthest distance from Earth on it’s non-circular orbit. Annular eclipses can be dramatic, but because they’re not total eclipses, they must be viewed with proper safety filters — looking at direct sunlight can damage your eyes. The moon will block up to 94 percent of sunlight for those directly under the narrow path. The “ring of fire” will appear “as thin as a basketball hoop with a half-inch rim seen face on from about 160 feet away,” explains Joe Rao, skywatching columnist for SPACE.com.  The sky won’t turn dark but for a few minutes it will transform into a strange “counterfeit twilight,” Rao said. The annular eclipse will be visible along a path roughly 150 to 186 miles wide (240 to 300 km) that includes Redding, Calif. and heads southeast through central Nevada, southern Utah, northern Arizona, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and the Texas Panhandle. (NASA lists local times and circumstances here.) People along but outside the main path of the annular eclipse will see a partial solar eclipse, in which the moon appears to take a bite out of the sun. Again, do not look directly at the sunlight. The partial eclipse will be visible, weather permitting, in much of the United States and Canada. The annular eclipse will be visible from 33 National Parks, including the Grand Canyon. It will also cast its shadow on Southern China and Japan, including Tokyo, on Monday, local time.