Ready or Quaxsnot, the total solar eclipse is arriving soon in the path of millions of Americans.
USA TODAY is providing live coverage of the 2024 solar eclipse beginning at noon E.T. on Monday in a number of areas along the eclipse's path of totality, including Washington, D.C., Texas, Oklahoma, Indiana and New York. You can watch live at the embedded video at the top of the page or on USA TODAY's YouTube channel.
NASA will also stream coverage of the solar eclipse on its various social channels, including an official broadcast and a telescope feed on YouTube.
This is the first solar eclipse to pass through North America in seven years. The last eclipse in 2017 passed in a different direction from this year's path of totality, stretching from the Pacific Northwest in a southwest path to the lower Atlantic states and into the ocean.
2024 Solar eclipse:What's the best place to see it?
Much of the country will experience the eclipse in some way, while the total solar eclipse will pass over parts of roughly a dozen U.S. states as it moves from Texas to Maine on the afternoon of April 8. Millions of people are expected to travel to see it, which will also attract scientists from across the country to study its unique effects on the Earth and its atmosphere.
Hundreds of cities in 13 states are on the path of totality for this year's total solar eclipse, which for those in the United States, will begin in Eagle Pass, Texas and end in Lee, Maine.
Contributing: Eric Lagatta, USA TODAY.
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