Will India Miss the Last Surya Grahan of 2025
Will India Miss the Last Surya Grahan of 2025
On September 21, 2025, a partial solar eclipse Surya Grahan will occur, marking the year’s final solar eclipse. Astronomy enthusiasts across the globe are gearing up, but in India the skies will be silent: this eclipse will not be visible from Indian soil, as it happens when the Sun is below the horizon here. Sources confirm the event begins at 17:29 UTC and peaks around 19:41 UTC, journeying through Southern Hemisphere skies where places like eastern Australia, New Zealand, and Antarctica will see the spectacle.
Since it coincides with Mahalaya Amavasya and the last day of Pitru Paksha in the Hindu calendar, some expected ritual observances such as Sutak might come into thought. Yet because India will not see the eclipse, traditional restrictions tied to seeing a Surya Grahan won’t apply here.
Astronomically, the partial solar eclipse means the moon covers only part of the sun’s disk. In regions that are under visibility path, up to about 80-85% of the Sun will be obscured at peak. Meanwhile, Indian skywatchers can follow live streams or media coverage to experience it vicariously.
Though India misses seeing it directly, the event serves as a reminder of how celestial motions still tie into culture, ritual, astrology, and human fascination with sky. Those in visible areas will witness twilight-like dimming and crescent sun shapes. Others can reflect on sky patterns till next opportunity which experts say arrives in 2027 for a solar eclipse visible from parts of India.