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Chase the eclipse on the Web

Even a partial eclipse, like this one from 2000, is a magnificent sight. Click through an interactive graphic that explains the science behind solar eclipses.
Even a partial eclipse, like this one from 2000, is a magnificent sight. Click through an interactive graphic that explains the science behind solar eclipses.Chris Gardner / AP file

If you want to see Tuesday's partial solar eclipse in person, you have to be in the right part of Europe, Asia or Africa ... but if you can see it on a computer screen, any old place is fine.

Eclipse-chasers typically spend thousands of dollars to be part of the celestial spectacle surrounding a solar eclipse, and if you have a chance to see totality in person, it's worth it. But chasing a partial eclipse on the Web costs much less, and you don't have to worry about gazing directly at the sun on your screen.

Here are some of the websites to check for streaming-video coverage of the eclipse:

If this eclipse develops like most others, not all these links will work, and not all these locations will have a clear view of the show — so you should be prepared to do lots of clicking back and forth in search of a good image. Have you found other options for eclipse-chasers? Feel free to pass them along in your comments. And if you happen to snap a cool eclipse picture, please consider sharing it with msnbc.com via our FirstPerson page.

Connect with Cosmic Log by "liking" our Facebook page or hooking up on Twitter, and check out "The Case forPluto," science editor Alan Boyle's book about Pluto and the planet quest.

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