Scanning across eight US states before passing through Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Brazil, the taxis, also known as the Impressive Fire-W converging nhataries, have been seen by millions of people.
Many people have pointed their cameras to the sky to record the entire brilliant beauty of this phenomenon and Space.com has compiled some of the most beautiful photos.
Space.com Editor Brett Tingley observes the sun from Great Basin National Park in Nevada during an exploration arranged by Travel Nevada.
The sky was clear at the time of the pollus effect, when the moon left only a circle of sunlight around the edge. Tingley captured the moment and phases of a partial solar ecstasy with a Unistellar eQuinox 2 kinh camera equipped with a solar filter.
Its unbelievable, Tingley wrote on social media X ( Twitter). Light begins to change as the sun is increasingly obscured by the moon. Temperature will drop slightly," he wrote.
Tingley is not the only person who watches the sunset that millions of people across the US, Central and South America can see.
The reality is partly visible, if weather allows, from much of the United States, with a 200-km ponytail route passing through the regions of Oregon, Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas, before moving to Mexico and southern states, ending in Brazil.
Photo reporter Patrick Fallon took a beautiful view of the "fire-cylinder" effect of the advisory sun from Albuquerque, New Mexico, which NASA used as one of the facilities for its sunned live broadcast.
NASA scientists have used termicolores in Albuquerque and Kerrville, Texas as a solar observation station.
In Kerrville, they enjoyed a four-minute sunglows, one of the longest periods of the sun.
The GOES-East and GOES-West satellites of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) have been tracking the Moon's ball as it passes through the US and the Western Hemisphere from an orbit above Earth. NOAA shared some stunning scenery on X.
As the autumn sunset passes through many major cities across the US, some communities have combined watching events with other festivals or celebrations.
Here, AFP photographer Patrick Fallon took a photo of a crowd wearing sunglasses to admire the fascinating astronomical phenomenon at the 51st Albuquerque International Hot air balloon Festival in Albuquerque.
It is known that the next plantainous nhat will take place in 2046.