A total solar eclipse will grace Australia's skies on Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. EST and would be visible to anyone around the world through a live streaming.

The eclipse will occur just after sunrise Wednesday in Australia, according to National Geographic. The event will be most visible in Northeastern Australia.

In a total solar eclipse, the moon passes between the Earth and the sun covering the sun completely. It is expected to last only two minutes with the sun only 14 degrees above the eastern horizon.

"Nothing in nature can equal the sheer spectacle of a total solar eclipse, and this time the event is a dramatic sunrise apparition in the tropics, low over the ocean off the great Barrier Reef," said Bob Berman on Astronomy Magazine.

The official Live Stream of the Solar Eclipse over Cairns and Great Barrier Reef, Australia will be available here. The channel will be live from 5am November 14th 2012 (AEST).

The total eclipse will also be live streaming by the Slooh Space Camera on its website beginning at 2:30 pm EST, an hour ahead of the actual event.

For researchers the total eclipse is a window to know more why the corona of the sun (the outer atmosphere) is so hot, according to a NASA video. It is even more hot than the sun's surface.