Are you wondering just how dark it's going to get on Monday when the solar clipse is overhead in downtown Orlando? 

The sky should look like it is twilight, but without the setting sun.

The above side-by-side comparison is an idea for what people can expect during the solar eclipse on Monday afternoon.

The 70-mile-wide path of totality — where residents and tourists will experience night for a short period of time — will enter the country in Oregon, cross 12 states and exit in South Carolina.

When will this transformation start where you live? NASA has an interactive map on its eclipse page where you can find out. Simply find where you live on the map, click on it, and it will tell you when the eclipse will start in your area, when it will hit its peak, and when it will end. Check out NASA's interactive eclipse map.