Wanna watch an eclipse?

Eclipses of the Sun and Moon, 2003

Note: The day of an eclipse is given in Universal Time (U.T.) and may start a day earlier or later depending on your time zone. (See Phenomena, 2003, to find time of eclipse.)

* May 16. Total eclipse of the Moon. The beginning of the umbral phase visible in Europe, southern Greenland, eastern North America, Central America, South America, most of Antarctica, Africa, western Middle East, the Atlantic Ocean, the southeast Pacific Ocean, and the western Indian Ocean; the end visible in the southern tip of Greenland, North America except the extreme northwest, Central America, South America, part of New Zealand, most of Antarctica, western Africa, western Iberian Peninsula, the Atlantic Ocean except the extreme northeast, and the eastern Pacific Ocean.
* May 31. Annular eclipse of the Sun. Visible in northeast Africa, Europe except Iberia (including the British Isles), northern Asia, northern Greenland, northern Canada, and Alaska.
* Nov. 8–9. Total eclipse of the Moon. The beginning of the umbral phase visible in Africa, Europe, western and central Asia, Greenland, the Arctic region, eastern North America, Central America, South America except the southern tip, coastal Queen Maud Land of Antarctica, the western Indian Ocean, and the Atlantic Ocean; the end visible in Europe, northwest Asia, the Arctic region, Greenland, North America, Central America, South America, Antarctic Peninsula, Africa except extreme eastern part, western Middle East, the Atlantic Ocean, and the eastern Pacific Ocean.
* Nov. 23–24. Total eclipse of the Sun. Visible in Australia, New Zealand, Antarctica, the South Pacific Ocean, and the southern tip of South America.