Friday morning's solar eclipse over France was tainted for many after a cloudy morning ruined the chances of seeing anything in the sky besides grey.
But French astronomers have shared some amazing images from what is the most complete solar eclipse in ten years, with the moon blocking out up to 82 percent of the sun as seen from some spots in France.
Here is a time lapse of the live feed from the Pic du Midi Observatory in Bigorre, south western France.
Revivez l'éclipse en Timelapse par 20Minutes
C’est parti pour l’ #eclipse2015 on peut la suivre en direct vidéo même si il fait moche ! http://t.co/LUKM4vJAa6 pic.twitter.com/PYebhub4PR
— CNRS (@CNRS) March 20, 2015
Au Pic du Midi, l'éclipse prend fin, on distingue une très belle tâche solaire en haut à gauche #eclipse2015 @CNRS pic.twitter.com/bR0KfVG9HK
— Keraunos (@KeraunosObs) March 20, 2015
Les derniers instants de l #eclipse2015 depuis #Nice http://t.co/HJKXRdl5Yw v/@UNIV_INSU_CNRS @ObsCoteAzur pic.twitter.com/lntvjieNK4
— CNRS (@CNRS) March 20, 2015
Je l'ai eu ! Une petite vingtaine de minutes où le soleil se laissait deviner à travers les nuages. #eclipse2015 pic.twitter.com/ewkxXZz9Qg
— Sylvain, cheminot (@amv_ac) March 20, 2015
The tweet below is from a reader in Pas de Calais, near Hesdin, in northern France.
@TheLocalFrance Here's my view… pic.twitter.com/RU794oiD3q
— Tilou™ (@Ti1ou) March 20, 2015
Indeed, readers from all over the country reported grey skies, from Brittany to Dordogne.
The view of the solar eclipse from the offices of @TheLocalFrance in Paris. pic.twitter.com/Uea9dcoIE4
— Oliver Gee (@olivergee23) March 20, 2015
The graph below shows exactly how the morning panned out above the clouds.
(Graphics from Timeanddate.com)
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