fbpx
Wikipedia

Solar eclipse

A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby obscuring the view of the Sun from a small part of the Earth, totally or partially. Such an alignment occurs approximately every six months, during the eclipse season in its new moon phase, when the Moon's orbital plane is closest to the plane of the Earth's orbit.[1] In a total eclipse, the disk of the Sun is fully obscured by the Moon. In partial and annular eclipses, only part of the Sun is obscured. Unlike a lunar eclipse, which may be viewed from anywhere on the night side of Earth, a solar eclipse can only be viewed from a relatively small area of the world. As such, although total solar eclipses occur somewhere on Earth every 18 months on average, they recur at any given place only once every 360 to 410 years.

A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon completely covers the Sun's disk, as seen in this 1999 solar eclipse. Solar prominences can be seen along the limb (in red) as well as extensive coronal filaments.
An annular solar eclipse (left) occurs when the Moon is too far away to completely cover the Sun's disk (May 20, 2012). During a partial solar eclipse (right), the Moon blocks only part of the Sun's disk (October 25, 2022).

If the Moon were in a perfectly circular orbit and in the same orbital plane as Earth, there would be total solar eclipses once a month, at every new moon. Instead, because the Moon's orbit is tilted at about 5 degrees to Earth's orbit, its shadow usually misses Earth. Solar (and lunar) eclipses therefore happen only during eclipse seasons, resulting in at least two, and up to five, solar eclipses each year, no more than two of which can be total.[2][3] Total eclipses are more rare because they require a more precise alignment between the centers of the Sun and Moon, and because the Moon's apparent size in the sky is sometimes too small to fully cover the Sun.

An eclipse is a natural phenomenon. In some ancient and modern cultures, solar eclipses were attributed to supernatural causes or regarded as bad omens. Astronomers' predictions of eclipses began in China as early as the 4th century BC; eclipses hundreds of years into the future may now be predicted with high accuracy.

Looking directly at the Sun can lead to permanent eye damage, so special eye protection or indirect viewing techniques are used when viewing a solar eclipse. Only the total phase of a total solar eclipse is safe to view without protection. Enthusiasts known as eclipse chasers or umbraphiles travel to remote locations to see solar eclipses.[4][5]

The symbol for an occultation, and especially a solar eclipse, is (U+1F775 🝵).

Types

 
Partial and annular phases of the solar eclipse of May 20, 2012

There are four types of solar eclipses:

  • A total eclipse occurs when the dark silhouette of the Moon completely obscures the intensely bright light of the Sun, allowing the much fainter solar corona to be visible. During any one eclipse, totality occurs at best only in a narrow track on the surface of Earth.[6] This narrow track is called the path of totality.[7]
  • An annular eclipse occurs when the Sun and Moon are exactly in line with the Earth, but the apparent size of the Moon is smaller than that of the Sun. Hence the Sun appears as a very bright ring, or annulus, surrounding the dark disk of the Moon.[8]
  • A hybrid eclipse (also called annular/total eclipse) shifts between a total and annular eclipse. At certain points on the surface of Earth, it appears as a total eclipse, whereas at other points it appears as annular. Hybrid eclipses are comparatively rare.[8]
  • A partial eclipse occurs when the Sun and Moon are not exactly in line with the Earth and the Moon only partially obscures the Sun. This phenomenon can usually be seen from a large part of the Earth outside of the track of an annular or total eclipse. However, some eclipses can be seen only as a partial eclipse, because the umbra passes above the Earth's polar regions and never intersects the Earth's surface.[8] Partial eclipses are virtually unnoticeable in terms of the Sun's brightness, as it takes well over 90% coverage to notice any darkening at all. Even at 99%, it would be no darker than civil twilight.[9]
 
Comparison of minimum and maximum apparent sizes of the Sun and Moon (and planets). An annular eclipse can occur when the Sun has a larger apparent size than the Moon, whereas a total eclipse can occur when the Moon has a larger apparent size.

The Sun's distance from Earth is about 400 times the Moon's distance, and the Sun's diameter is about 400 times the Moon's diameter. Because these ratios are approximately the same, the Sun and the Moon as seen from Earth appear to be approximately the same size: about 0.5 degree of arc in angular measure.[8]

The Moon's orbit around the Earth is slightly elliptical, as is the Earth's orbit around the Sun. The apparent sizes of the Sun and Moon therefore vary.[10] The magnitude of an eclipse is the ratio of the apparent size of the Moon to the apparent size of the Sun during an eclipse. An eclipse that occurs when the Moon is near its closest distance to Earth (i.e., near its perigee) can be a total eclipse because the Moon will appear to be large enough to completely cover the Sun's bright disk or photosphere; a total eclipse has a magnitude greater than or equal to 1.000. Conversely, an eclipse that occurs when the Moon is near its farthest distance from Earth (i.e., near its apogee) can be only an annular eclipse because the Moon will appear to be slightly smaller than the Sun; the magnitude of an annular eclipse is less than 1.[11]

A hybrid eclipse occurs when the magnitude of an eclipse changes during the event from less to greater than one, so the eclipse appears to be total at locations nearer the midpoint, and annular at other locations nearer the beginning and end, since the sides of the Earth are slightly further away from the Moon. These eclipses are extremely narrow in their path width and relatively short in their duration at any point compared with fully total eclipses; the 2023 April 20 hybrid eclipse's totality is over a minute in duration at various points along the path of totality. Like a focal point, the width and duration of totality and annularity are near zero at the points where the changes between the two occur.[12]

Because the Earth's orbit around the Sun is also elliptical, the Earth's distance from the Sun similarly varies throughout the year. This affects the apparent size of the Sun in the same way, but not as much as does the Moon's varying distance from Earth.[8] When Earth approaches its farthest distance from the Sun in early July, a total eclipse is somewhat more likely, whereas conditions favour an annular eclipse when Earth approaches its closest distance to the Sun in early January.[13]

Terminology for central eclipse

 
Each icon shows the view from the centre of its black spot, representing the Moon (not to scale)
 
Diamond ring effect at third contact—the end of totality—with visible prominences

Central eclipse is often used as a generic term for a total, annular, or hybrid eclipse.[14] This is, however, not completely correct: the definition of a central eclipse is an eclipse during which the central line of the umbra touches the Earth's surface. It is possible, though extremely rare, that part of the umbra intersects with the Earth (thus creating an annular or total eclipse), but not its central line. This is then called a non-central total or annular eclipse.[14] Gamma is a measure of how centrally the shadow strikes. The last (umbral yet) non-central solar eclipse was on April 29, 2014. This was an annular eclipse. The next non-central total solar eclipse will be on April 9, 2043.[15]

The visual phases observed during a total eclipse are called:[16]

  • First contact—when the Moon's limb (edge) is exactly tangential to the Sun's limb.
  • Second contact—starting with Baily's Beads (caused by light shining through valleys on the Moon's surface) and the diamond ring effect. Almost the entire disk is covered.
  • Totality—the Moon obscures the entire disk of the Sun and only the solar corona is visible.
  • Third contact—when the first bright light becomes visible and the Moon's shadow is moving away from the observer. Again a diamond ring may be observed.
  • Fourth contact—when the trailing edge of the Moon ceases to overlap with the solar disk and the eclipse ends.

Predictions

Geometry

 
Geometry of a total solar eclipse (not to scale)

The diagrams to the right show the alignment of the Sun, Moon, and Earth during a solar eclipse. The dark gray region between the Moon and Earth is the umbra, where the Sun is completely obscured by the Moon. The small area where the umbra touches Earth's surface is where a total eclipse can be seen. The larger light gray area is the penumbra, in which a partial eclipse can be seen. An observer in the antumbra, the area of shadow beyond the umbra, will see an annular eclipse.[17]

The Moon's orbit around the Earth is inclined at an angle of just over 5 degrees to the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun (the ecliptic). Because of this, at the time of a new moon, the Moon will usually pass to the north or south of the Sun. A solar eclipse can occur only when a new moon occurs close to one of the points (known as nodes) where the Moon's orbit crosses the ecliptic.[18]

As noted above, the Moon's orbit is also elliptical. The Moon's distance from the Earth can vary by about 6% from its average value. Therefore, the Moon's apparent size varies with its distance from the Earth, and it is this effect that leads to the difference between total and annular eclipses. The distance of the Earth from the Sun also varies during the year, but this is a smaller effect. On average, the Moon appears to be slightly smaller than the Sun as seen from the Earth, so the majority (about 60%) of central eclipses are annular. It is only when the Moon is closer to the Earth than average (near its perigee) that a total eclipse occurs.[19][20]

  Moon Sun
At perigee
(nearest)
At apogee
(farthest)
At perihelion
(nearest)
At aphelion
(farthest)
Mean radius 1,737.10 km
(1,079.38 mi)
696,000 km
(432,000 mi)
Distance 363,104 km
(225,622 mi)
405,696 km
(252,088 mi)
147,098,070 km
(91,402,500 mi)
152,097,700 km
(94,509,100 mi)
Angular
diameter[21]
33' 30"
(0.5583°)
29' 26"
(0.4905°)
32' 42"
(0.5450°)
31' 36"
(0.5267°)
Apparent size
to scale
       
Order by
decreasing
apparent size
1st 4th 2nd 3rd

The Moon orbits the Earth in approximately 27.3 days, relative to a fixed frame of reference. This is known as the sidereal month. However, during one sidereal month, Earth has revolved part way around the Sun, making the average time between one new moon and the next longer than the sidereal month: it is approximately 29.5 days. This is known as the synodic month and corresponds to what is commonly called the lunar month.[18]

The Moon crosses from south to north of the ecliptic at its ascending node, and vice versa at its descending node.[18] However, the nodes of the Moon's orbit are gradually moving in a retrograde motion, due to the action of the Sun's gravity on the Moon's motion, and they make a complete circuit every 18.6 years. This regression means that the time between each passage of the Moon through the ascending node is slightly shorter than the sidereal month. This period is called the nodical or draconic month.[22]

Finally, the Moon's perigee is moving forwards or precessing in its orbit and makes a complete circuit in 8.85 years. The time between one perigee and the next is slightly longer than the sidereal month and known as the anomalistic month.[23]

The Moon's orbit intersects with the ecliptic at the two nodes that are 180 degrees apart. Therefore, the new moon occurs close to the nodes at two periods of the year approximately six months (173.3 days) apart, known as eclipse seasons, and there will always be at least one solar eclipse during these periods. Sometimes the new moon occurs close enough to a node during two consecutive months to eclipse the Sun on both occasions in two partial eclipses. This means that, in any given year, there will always be at least two solar eclipses, and there can be as many as five.[24]

Eclipses can occur only when the Sun is within about 15 to 18 degrees of a node, (10 to 12 degrees for central eclipses). This is referred to as an eclipse limit, and is given in ranges because the apparent sizes and speeds of the Sun and Moon vary throughout the year. In the time it takes for the Moon to return to a node (draconic month), the apparent position of the Sun has moved about 29 degrees, relative to the nodes.[2] Since the eclipse limit creates a window of opportunity of up to 36 degrees (24 degrees for central eclipses), it is possible for partial eclipses (or rarely a partial and a central eclipse) to occur in consecutive months.[25][26]

 
Fraction of the Sun's disc covered, f, when the same-sized discs are offset a fraction t of their diameter.[27]

Path

During a central eclipse, the Moon's umbra (or antumbra, in the case of an annular eclipse) moves rapidly from west to east across the Earth. The Earth is also rotating from west to east, at about 28 km/min at the Equator, but as the Moon is moving in the same direction as the Earth's rotation at about 61 km/min, the umbra almost always appears to move in a roughly west–east direction across a map of the Earth at the speed of the Moon's orbital velocity minus the Earth's rotational velocity.[28]

The width of the track of a central eclipse varies according to the relative apparent diameters of the Sun and Moon. In the most favourable circumstances, when a total eclipse occurs very close to perigee, the track can be up to 267 km (166 mi) wide and the duration of totality may be over 7 minutes.[29] Outside of the central track, a partial eclipse is seen over a much larger area of the Earth. Typically, the umbra is 100–160 km wide, while the penumbral diameter is in excess of 6400 km.[30]

Besselian elements are used to predict whether an eclipse will be partial, annular, or total (or annular/total), and what the eclipse circumstances will be at any given location.[31]: Chapter 11 

Calculations with Besselian elements can determine the exact shape of the umbra's shadow on the Earth's surface. But at what longitudes on the Earth's surface the shadow will fall, is a function of the Earth's rotation, and on how much that rotation has slowed down over time. A number called ΔT is used in eclipse prediction to take this slowing into account. As the Earth slows, ΔT increases. ΔT for dates in the future can only be roughly estimated because the Earth's rotation is slowing irregularly. This means that, although it is possible to predict that there will be a total eclipse on a certain date in the far future, it is not possible to predict in the far future exactly at what longitudes that eclipse will be total. Historical records of eclipses allow estimates of past values of ΔT and so of the Earth's rotation. [31]: Equation 11.132 

Duration

The following factors determine the duration of a total solar eclipse (in order of decreasing importance):[32][33]

  1. The Moon being almost exactly at perigee (making its angular diameter as large as possible).
  2. The Earth being very near aphelion (furthest away from the Sun in its elliptical orbit, making its angular diameter nearly as small as possible).
  3. The midpoint of the eclipse being very close to the Earth's equator, where the rotational velocity is greatest and is closest to the speed of the lunar shadow moving over Earth's surface.
  4. The vector of the eclipse path at the midpoint of the eclipse aligning with the vector of the Earth's rotation (i.e. not diagonal but due east).
  5. The midpoint of the eclipse being near the subsolar point (the part of the Earth closest to the Sun).

The longest eclipse that has been calculated thus far is the eclipse of July 16, 2186 (with a maximum duration of 7 minutes 29 seconds over northern Guyana).[32]

Occurrence and cycles

 
As the Earth revolves around the Sun, approximate axial parallelism of the Moon's orbital plane (tilted five degrees to the Earth's orbital plane) results in the revolution of the lunar nodes relative to the Earth. This causes an eclipse season approximately every six months, in which a solar eclipse can occur at the new moon phase and a lunar eclipse can occur at the full moon phase.
 
Total solar eclipse paths: 1001–2000, showing that total solar eclipses occur almost everywhere on Earth. This image was merged from 50 separate images from NASA.[34]

Total solar eclipses are rare events. Although they occur somewhere on Earth every 18 months on average,[35] it is estimated that they recur at any given place only once every 360 to 410 years, on average.[36] The total eclipse lasts for only a maximum of a few minutes at any location, because the Moon's umbra moves eastward at over 1700 km/h.[37] Totality currently can never last more than 7 min 32 s. This value changes over the millennia and is currently decreasing. By the 8th millennium, the longest theoretically possible total eclipse will be less than 7 min 2 s.[32] The last time an eclipse longer than 7 minutes occurred was June 30, 1973 (7 min 3 sec). Observers aboard a Concorde supersonic aircraft were able to stretch totality for this eclipse to about 74 minutes by flying along the path of the Moon's umbra.[38] The next total eclipse exceeding seven minutes in duration will not occur until June 25, 2150. The longest total solar eclipse during the 11,000 year period from 3000 BC to at least 8000 AD will occur on July 16, 2186, when totality will last 7 min 29 s.[32][39] For comparison, the longest total eclipse of the 20th century at 7 min 8 s occurred on June 20, 1955, and there will be no total solar eclipses over 7 min in duration in the 21st century.[40]

It is possible to predict other eclipses using eclipse cycles. The saros is probably the best known and one of the most accurate. A saros lasts 6,585.3 days (a little over 18 years), which means that, after this period, a practically identical eclipse will occur. The most notable difference will be a westward shift of about 120° in longitude (due to the 0.3 days) and a little in latitude (north-south for odd-numbered cycles, the reverse for even-numbered ones). A saros series always starts with a partial eclipse near one of Earth's polar regions, then shifts over the globe through a series of annular or total eclipses, and ends with a partial eclipse at the opposite polar region. A saros series lasts 1226 to 1550 years and 69 to 87 eclipses, with about 40 to 60 of them being central.[41]

Frequency per year

Between two and five solar eclipses occur every year, with at least one per eclipse season. Since the Gregorian calendar was instituted in 1582, years that have had five solar eclipses were 1693, 1758, 1805, 1823, 1870, and 1935. The next occurrence will be 2206.[42] On average, there are about 240 solar eclipses each century.[43]

The 5 solar eclipses of 1935
January 5 February 3 June 30 July 30 December 25
Partial
(south)
Partial
(north)
Partial
(north)
Partial
(south)
Annular
(south)
 
Saros 111
 
Saros 149
 
Saros 116
 
Saros 154
 
Saros 121

Final totality

Total solar eclipses are seen on Earth because of a fortuitous combination of circumstances. Even on Earth, the diversity of eclipses familiar to people today is a temporary (on a geological time scale) phenomenon. Hundreds of millions of years in the past, the Moon was closer to the Earth and therefore apparently larger, so every solar eclipse was total or partial, and there were no annular eclipses. Due to tidal acceleration, the orbit of the Moon around the Earth becomes approximately 3.8 cm more distant each year. Millions of years in the future, the Moon will be too far away to fully occlude the Sun, and no total eclipses will occur. In the same timeframe, the Sun may become brighter, making it appear larger in size.[44] Estimates of the time when the Moon will be unable to occlude the entire Sun when viewed from the Earth range between 650 million[45] and 1.4 billion years in the future.[44]

Historical eclipses

 
Astronomers Studying an Eclipse painted by Antoine Caron in 1571

Historical eclipses are a very valuable resource for historians, in that they allow a few historical events to be dated precisely, from which other dates and ancient calendars may be deduced.[46] A solar eclipse of June 15, 763 BC mentioned in an Assyrian text is important for the chronology of the ancient Near East.[47] There have been other claims to date earlier eclipses. The legendary Chinese king Zhong Kang supposedly beheaded two astronomers, Hsi and Ho, who failed to predict an eclipse 4,000 years ago.[48] Perhaps the earliest still-unproven claim is that of archaeologist Bruce Masse, who putatively links an eclipse that occurred on May 10, 2807, BC with a possible meteor impact in the Indian Ocean on the basis of several ancient flood myths that mention a total solar eclipse.[49] The earliest preserved depiction of a partial solar eclipse from 1143 BCE might be the one in tomb KV9 of Ramses V and Ramses VI.[50]

 
Records of the solar eclipses of 993 and 1004 as well as the lunar eclipses of 1001 and 1002 by Ibn Yunus of Cairo (c. 1005).

Eclipses have been interpreted as omens, or portents.[51] The ancient Greek historian Herodotus wrote that Thales of Miletus predicted an eclipse that occurred during a battle between the Medes and the Lydians. Both sides put down their weapons and declared peace as a result of the eclipse.[52] The exact eclipse involved remains uncertain, although the issue has been studied by hundreds of ancient and modern authorities. One likely candidate took place on May 28, 585 BC, probably near the Halys river in Asia Minor.[53] An eclipse recorded by Herodotus before Xerxes departed for his expedition against Greece,[54] which is traditionally dated to 480 BC, was matched by John Russell Hind to an annular eclipse of the Sun at Sardis on February 17, 478 BC.[55] Alternatively, a partial eclipse was visible from Persia on October 2, 480 BC.[56] Herodotus also reports a solar eclipse at Sparta during the Second Persian invasion of Greece.[57] The date of the eclipse (August 1, 477 BC) does not match exactly the conventional dates for the invasion accepted by historians.[58]

Chinese records of eclipses begin at around 720 BC.[59] The 4th century BC astronomer Shi Shen described the prediction of eclipses by using the relative positions of the Moon and Sun.[60]

Attempts have been made to establish the exact date of Good Friday by assuming that the darkness described at Jesus's crucifixion was a solar eclipse. This research has not yielded conclusive results,[61][62] and Good Friday is recorded as being at Passover, which is held at the time of a full moon. Further, the darkness lasted from the sixth hour to the ninth, or three hours, which is much, much longer than the eight-minute upper limit for any solar eclipse's totality. Contemporary chronicles wrote about an eclipse at the beginning of May 664 that coincided with the beginning of the plague of 664 in the British isles.[63] In the Western hemisphere, there are few reliable records of eclipses before AD 800, until the advent of Arab and monastic observations in the early medieval period.[59] The Cairo astronomer Ibn Yunus wrote that the calculation of eclipses was one of the many things that connect astronomy with the Islamic law, because it allowed knowing when a special prayer can be made.[64] The first recorded observation of the corona was made in Constantinople in AD 968.[56][59]

 
Erhard Weigel, predicted course of moon shadow on 12 August 1654 (O.S. 2 August)

The first known telescopic observation of a total solar eclipse was made in France in 1706.[59] Nine years later, English astronomer Edmund Halley accurately predicted and observed the solar eclipse of May 3, 1715.[56][59] By the mid-19th century, scientific understanding of the Sun was improving through observations of the Sun's corona during solar eclipses. The corona was identified as part of the Sun's atmosphere in 1842, and the first photograph (or daguerreotype) of a total eclipse was taken of the solar eclipse of July 28, 1851.[56] Spectroscope observations were made of the solar eclipse of August 18, 1868, which helped to determine the chemical composition of the Sun.[56]John Fiske summed up myths about the solar eclipse like this in his 1872 book Myth and Myth-Makers,

the myth of Hercules and Cacus, the fundamental idea is the victory of the solar god over the robber who steals the light. Now whether the robber carries off the light in the evening when Indra has gone to sleep, or boldly rears his black form against the sky during the daytime, causing darkness to spread over the earth, would make little difference to the framers of the myth. To a chicken a solar eclipse is the same thing as nightfall, and he goes to roost accordingly. Why, then, should the primitive thinker have made a distinction between the darkening of the sky caused by black clouds and that caused by the rotation of the earth? He had no more conception of the scientific explanation of these phenomena than the chicken has of the scientific explanation of an eclipse. For him it was enough to know that the solar radiance was stolen, in the one case as in the other, and to suspect that the same demon was to blame for both robberies.[65]

Viewing

2017 total solar eclipse viewed in real time with audience reactions

Looking directly at the photosphere of the Sun (the bright disk of the Sun itself), even for just a few seconds, can cause permanent damage to the retina of the eye, because of the intense visible and invisible radiation that the photosphere emits. This damage can result in impairment of vision, up to and including blindness. The retina has no sensitivity to pain, and the effects of retinal damage may not appear for hours, so there is no warning that injury is occurring.[66][67]

Under normal conditions, the Sun is so bright that it is difficult to stare at it directly. However, during an eclipse, with so much of the Sun covered, it is easier and more tempting to stare at it. Looking at the Sun during an eclipse is as dangerous as looking at it outside an eclipse, except during the brief period of totality, when the Sun's disk is completely covered (totality occurs only during a total eclipse and only very briefly; it does not occur during a partial or annular eclipse). Viewing the Sun's disk through any kind of optical aid (binoculars, a telescope, or even an optical camera viewfinder) is extremely hazardous and can cause irreversible eye damage within a fraction of a second.[68][69]

Partial and annular eclipses

 
Eclipse glasses filter out eye damaging radiation, allowing direct viewing of the Sun during all partial eclipse phases; they are not used during totality, when the Sun is completely eclipsed
 
Pinhole projection method of observing partial solar eclipse. Insert (upper left): partially eclipsed Sun photographed with a white solar filter. Main image: projections of the partially eclipsed Sun (bottom right)

Viewing the Sun during partial and annular eclipses (and during total eclipses outside the brief period of totality) requires special eye protection, or indirect viewing methods if eye damage is to be avoided. The Sun's disk can be viewed using appropriate filtration to block the harmful part of the Sun's radiation. Sunglasses do not make viewing the Sun safe. Only properly designed and certified solar filters should be used for direct viewing of the Sun's disk.[70] Especially, self-made filters using common objects such as a floppy disk removed from its case, a Compact Disc, a black colour slide film, smoked glass, etc. must be avoided.[71][72]

The safest way to view the Sun's disk is by indirect projection.[73] This can be done by projecting an image of the disk onto a white piece of paper or card using a pair of binoculars (with one of the lenses covered), a telescope, or another piece of cardboard with a small hole in it (about 1 mm diameter), often called a pinhole camera. The projected image of the Sun can then be safely viewed; this technique can be used to observe sunspots, as well as eclipses. Care must be taken, however, to ensure that no one looks through the projector (telescope, pinhole, etc.) directly.[74] Viewing the Sun's disk on a video display screen (provided by a video camera or digital camera) is safe, although the camera itself may be damaged by direct exposure to the Sun. The optical viewfinders provided with some video and digital cameras are not safe. Securely mounting #14 welder's glass in front of the lens and viewfinder protects the equipment and makes viewing possible.[72] Professional workmanship is essential because of the dire consequences any gaps or detaching mountings will have. In the partial eclipse path, one will not be able to see the corona or nearly complete darkening of the sky. However, depending on how much of the Sun's disk is obscured, some darkening may be noticeable. If three-quarters or more of the Sun is obscured, then an effect can be observed by which the daylight appears to be dim, as if the sky were overcast, yet objects still cast sharp shadows.[75]

Totality

 
Baily's beads, sunlight visible through lunar valleys
 
Composite image with corona, prominences, and diamond ring effect

When the shrinking visible part of the photosphere becomes very small, Baily's beads will occur. These are caused by the sunlight still being able to reach the Earth through lunar valleys. Totality then begins with the diamond ring effect, the last bright flash of sunlight.[76]

It is safe to observe the total phase of a solar eclipse directly only when the Sun's photosphere is completely covered by the Moon, and not before or after totality.[73] During this period, the Sun is too dim to be seen through filters. The Sun's faint corona will be visible, and the chromosphere, solar prominences, and possibly even a solar flare may be seen. At the end of totality, the same effects will occur in reverse order, and on the opposite side of the Moon.[76]

Eclipse chasing

A dedicated group of eclipse chasers have pursued the observation of solar eclipses when they occur around the Earth.[77] A person who chases eclipses is known as an umbraphile, meaning shadow lover.[78] Umbraphiles travel for eclipses and use various tools to help view the sun including solar viewing glasses, also known as eclipse glasses, as well as telescopes.[79][80]

Photography

 
The progression of a solar eclipse on August 1, 2008 in Novosibirsk, Russia. All times UTC (local time was UTC+7). The time span between shots is three minutes.

Photographing an eclipse is possible with fairly common camera equipment. In order for the disk of the Sun/Moon to be easily visible, a fairly high magnification long focus lens is needed (at least 200 mm for a 35 mm camera), and for the disk to fill most of the frame, a longer lens is needed (over 500 mm). As with viewing the Sun directly, looking at it through the optical viewfinder of a camera can produce damage to the retina, so care is recommended.[81] Solar filters are required for digital photography even if an optical viewfinder is not used. Using a camera's live view feature or an electronic viewfinder is safe for the human eye, but the Sun's rays could potentially irreparably damage digital image sensors unless the lens is covered by a properly designed solar filter.[82]

Other observations

A total solar eclipse provides a rare opportunity to observe the corona (the outer layer of the Sun's atmosphere). Normally this is not visible because the photosphere is much brighter than the corona. According to the point reached in the solar cycle, the corona may appear small and symmetric, or large and fuzzy. It is very hard to predict this in advance.[83]

 
Pinholes in shadows during no eclipse (1 & 4), a partial eclipse (2 & 5) and an annular eclipse (3 & 6)

As the light filters through leaves of trees during a partial eclipse, the overlapping leaves create natural pinholes, displaying mini eclipses on the ground.[84]

Phenomena associated with eclipses include shadow bands (also known as flying shadows), which are similar to shadows on the bottom of a swimming pool. They occur only just prior to and after totality, when a narrow solar crescent acts as an anisotropic light source.[85]

1919 observations

 
Eddington's original photograph of the 1919 eclipse, which provided evidence for Einstein's theory of general relativity.

The observation of a total solar eclipse of May 29, 1919, helped to confirm Einstein's theory of general relativity. By comparing the apparent distance between stars in the constellation Taurus, with and without the Sun between them, Arthur Eddington stated that the theoretical predictions about gravitational lenses were confirmed.[86] The observation with the Sun between the stars was possible only during totality since the stars are then visible. Though Eddington's observations were near the experimental limits of accuracy at the time, work in the later half of the 20th century confirmed his results.[87][88]

Gravity anomalies

There is a long history of observations of gravity-related phenomena during solar eclipses, especially during the period of totality. In 1954, and again in 1959, Maurice Allais reported observations of strange and unexplained movement during solar eclipses.[89] The reality of this phenomenon, named the Allais effect, has remained controversial. Similarly, in 1970, Saxl and Allen observed the sudden change in motion of a torsion pendulum; this phenomenon is called the Saxl effect.[90]

Observation during the 1997 solar eclipse by Wang et al. suggested a possible gravitational shielding effect,[91] which generated debate. In 2002, Wang and a collaborator published detailed data analysis, which suggested that the phenomenon still remains unexplained.[92]

Eclipses and transits

In principle, the simultaneous occurrence of a solar eclipse and a transit of a planet is possible. But these events are extremely rare because of their short durations. The next anticipated simultaneous occurrence of a solar eclipse and a transit of Mercury will be on July 5, 6757, and a solar eclipse and a transit of Venus is expected on April 5, 15232.[93]

More common, but still infrequent, is a conjunction of a planet (especially, but not only, Mercury or Venus) at the time of a total solar eclipse, in which event the planet will be visible very near the eclipsed Sun, when without the eclipse it would have been lost in the Sun's glare. At one time, some scientists hypothesized that there may be a planet (often given the name Vulcan) even closer to the Sun than Mercury; the only way to confirm its existence would have been to observe it in transit or during a total solar eclipse. No such planet was ever found, and general relativity has since explained the observations that led astronomers to suggest that Vulcan might exist.[94]

Artificial satellites

 
The Moon's shadow over Turkey and Cyprus, seen from the ISS during a 2006 total solar eclipse.
 
A composite image showing the ISS transit of the Sun while the 2017 solar eclipse was in progress.

Artificial satellites can also pass in front of the Sun as seen from the Earth, but none is large enough to cause an eclipse. At the altitude of the International Space Station, for example, an object would need to be about 3.35 km (2.08 mi) across to blot the Sun out entirely. These transits are difficult to watch because the zone of visibility is very small. The satellite passes over the face of the Sun in about a second, typically. As with a transit of a planet, it will not get dark.[95]

Observations of eclipses from spacecraft or artificial satellites orbiting above the Earth's atmosphere are not subject to weather conditions. The crew of Gemini 12 observed a total solar eclipse from space in 1966.[96] The partial phase of the 1999 total eclipse was visible from Mir.[97]

Impact

The solar eclipse of March 20, 2015, was the first occurrence of an eclipse estimated to potentially have a significant impact on the power system, with the electricity sector taking measures to mitigate any impact. The continental Europe and Great Britain synchronous areas were estimated to have about 90 gigawatts of solar power and it was estimated that production would temporarily decrease by up to 34 GW compared to a clear sky day.[98][99]

Eclipses may cause the temperature to decrease by 3 °C, with wind power potentially decreasing as winds are reduced by 0.7 m/s.[100]

In addition to the drop in light level and air temperature, animals change their behavior during totality. For example, birds and squirrels return to their nests and crickets chirp.[101]

Recent and forthcoming solar eclipses

 
Eclipse path for total and hybrid eclipses from 2021 to 2040.

Eclipses occur only in the eclipse season, when the Sun is close to either the ascending or descending node of the Moon. Each eclipse is separated by one, five or six lunations (synodic months), and the midpoint of each season is separated by 173.3 days, which is the mean time for the Sun to travel from one node to the next. The period is a little less than half a calendar year because the lunar nodes slowly regress. Because 223 synodic months is roughly equal to 239 anomalistic months and 242 draconic months, eclipses with similar geometry recur 223 synodic months (about 6,585.3 days) apart. This period (18 years 11.3 days) is a saros. Because 223 synodic months is not identical to 239 anomalistic months or 242 draconic months, saros cycles do not endlessly repeat. Each cycle begins with the Moon's shadow crossing the Earth near the north or south pole, and subsequent events progress toward the other pole until the Moon's shadow misses the Earth and the series ends.[25] Saros cycles are numbered; currently, cycles 117 to 156 are active.[citation needed]

1997–2000

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[102]

Solar eclipse series sets from 1997–2000
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
120
 
Chita, Russia
1997 March 09
 
Total
0.91830 125 1997 September 02
 
Partial (south)
-1.03521
130
 
Total eclipse near Guadeloupe
1998 February 26
 
Total
0.23909 135 1998 August 22
 
Annular
-0.26441
140 1999 February 16
 
Annular
-0.47260 145
 
Totality from France
1999 August 11
 
Total
0.50623
150 2000 February 05
 
Partial (south)
-1.22325 155 2000 July 31
 
Partial (north)
1.21664

Partial solar eclipses on July 1, 2000 and December 25, 2000 occur in the next lunar year eclipse set.

2000–2003

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[103]

Partial solar eclipses on February 5, 2000 and July 31, 2000 occur in the previous lunar year set.

Solar eclipse series sets from 2000–2003
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
117 2000 July 01
 
Partial (south)
-1.28214 122 2000 December 25
 
Partial (north)
1.13669
127
 
Totality from Lusaka, Zambia
2001 June 21
 
Total
-0.57013 132
 
Partial from Minneapolis, MN
2001 December 14
 
Annular
0.40885
137
 
Partial from Los Angeles, CA
2002 June 10
 
Annular
0.19933 142
 
Totality from Woomera
2002 December 04
 
Total
-0.30204
147
 
Culloden, Scotland
2003 May 31
 
Annular
0.99598 152 2003 November 23
 
Total
-0.96381

2004–2007

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[104]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2004–2007
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
119 2004 April 19
 
Partial (south)
-1.13345 124 2004 October 14
 
Partial (north)
1.03481
129
 
Partial from Naiguatá
2005 April 08
 
Hybrid
-0.34733 134
 
Annular from Madrid, Spain
2005 October 03
 
Annular
0.33058
139
 
Total from Side, Turkey
2006 March 29
 
Total
0.38433 144
 
Partial from São Paulo, Brazil
2006 September 22
 
Annular
-0.40624
149
 
From Jaipur, India
2007 March 19
 
Partial (north)
1.07277 154
 
From Córdoba, Argentina
2007 September 11
 
Partial (south)
-1.12552

2008–2011

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[105]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2008–2011
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
121
 
Partial from Christchurch, NZ
2008 February 07
 
Annular
-0.95701 126
 
Novosibirsk, Russia
2008 August 01
 
Total
0.83070
131
 
Palangka Raya, Indonesia
2009 January 26
 
Annular
-0.28197 136
 
Kurigram, Bangladesh
2009 July 22
 
Total
0.06977
141
 
Bangui, Central African Republic
2010 January 15
 
Annular
0.40016 146
 
Hao, French Polynesia
2010 July 11
 
Total
-0.67877
151
 
Partial from Vienna, Austria
2011 January 04
 
Partial (north)
1.06265 156 2011 July 01
 
Partial (south)
-1.49171

Partial solar eclipses on June 1, 2011, and November 25, 2011, occur on the next lunar year eclipse set.

2011–2014

This eclipse is a member of the 2011–2014 solar eclipse semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[106][Note 1]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2011–2014
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
118
 
Partial from Tromsø, Norway
2011 June 01
 
Partial (north)
1.21300 123 2011 November 25
 
Partial (south)
-1.05359
128
 
Middlegate, Nevada
2012 May 20
 
Annular
0.48279 133
 
Cairns, Australia
2012 November 13
 
Total
-0.37189
138
 
Churchills Head, Australia
2013 May 10
 
Annular
-0.26937 143
 
Partial from Libreville, Gabon
2013 November 03
 
Hybrid
0.32715
148
 
Partial from Adelaide, Australia
2014 April 29
 
Annular (non-central)
-0.99996 153
 
Partial from Minneapolis
2014 October 23
 
Partial (north)
1.09078

2015–2018

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[107]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2015–2018
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
120
 
Longyearbyen, Svalbard
2015 March 20
 
Total
0.94536 125
 
Solar Dynamics Observatory

2015 September 13
 
Partial (south)
-1.10039
130
 
Balikpapan, Indonesia
2016 March 9
 
Total
0.26092 135
 
L'Étang-Salé, Réunion
2016 September 1
 
Annular
-0.33301
140
 
Partial from Buenos Aires
2017 February 26
 
Annular
-0.45780 145
 
Casper, Wyoming
2017 August 21
 
Total
0.43671
150
 
Partial from Olivos, Buenos Aires
2018 February 15
 
Partial (south)
-1.21163 155
 
Partial from Huittinen, Finland
2018 August 11
 
Partial (north)
1.14758

Partial solar eclipses on July 13, 2018, and January 6, 2019, occur during the next semester series.

2018–2021

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[108]

Note: Partial solar eclipses on February 15, 2018, and August 11, 2018, occurred during the previous semester series.

Solar eclipse series sets from 2018–2021
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
117
 
Partial from Melbourne, Australia
2018 July 13
 
Partial
-1.35423 122
 
Partial from Nakhodka, Russia
2019 January 6
 
Partial
1.14174
127
 
La Serena, Chile
2019 July 2
 
Total
-0.64656 132
 
Jaffna, Sri Lanka
2019 December 26
 
Annular
0.41351
137
 
Beigang, Yunlin, Taiwan
2020 June 21
 
Annular
0.12090 142
 
Gorbea, Chile
2020 December 14
 
Total
-0.29394
147
 
Partial from Halifax, Canada
2021 June 10
 
Annular
0.91516 152 2021 December 4
 
Total
-0.95261

2022–2025

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[109]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2022–2025
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
119
 
Partial from Santiago, Chile
2022 April 30
 
Partial
-1.19008 124
 
Partial from Saratov, Russia
2022 October 25
 
Partial
1.07014
129
 
Partial from
Magetan, Indonesia
2023 April 20
 
Hybrid
-0.39515 134 2023 October 14
 
Annular
0.37534
139 2024 April 8
 
Total
0.34314 144 2024 October 2
 
Annular
-0.35087
149 2025 March 29
 
Partial
1.04053 154 2025 September 21
 
Partial
-1.06509

2026–2029

This eclipse is a member of a semester series. An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.[110]

Solar eclipse series sets from 2026–2029
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma
121 2026 February 17
 
Annular
-0.97427 126 2026 August 12
 
Total
0.89774
131 2027 February 6
 
Annular
-0.29515 136 2027 August 2
 
Total
0.14209
141 2028 January 26
 
Annular
0.39014 146 2028 July 22
 
Total
-0.60557
151 2029 January 14
 
Partial
1.05532 156 2029 July 11
 
Partial
-1.41908

Partial solar eclipses on June 12, 2029, and December 5, 2029, occur in the next lunar year eclipse set.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ The partial solar eclipses of January 4, 2011 and July 1, 2011 occurred in the previous semester series.

Notes

  1. ^ "What is an eclipse?". European Space Agency. from the original on 2018-08-04. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  2. ^ a b Littmann, Mark; Espenak, Fred; Willcox, Ken (2008). Totality: Eclipses of the Sun. Oxford University Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-0-19-953209-4.
  3. ^ Five solar eclipses occurred in 1935.NASA (September 6, 2009). "Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses". NASA Eclipse Web Site. Fred Espenak, Project and Website Manager. from the original on April 29, 2010. Retrieved January 26, 2010.
  4. ^ Koukkos, Christina (May 14, 2009). "Eclipse Chasing, in Pursuit of Total Awe". The New York Times. from the original on June 26, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  5. ^ Pasachoff, Jay M. (July 10, 2010). "Why I Never Miss a Solar Eclipse". The New York Times. from the original on June 26, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  6. ^ Harrington, pp. 7–8
  7. ^ . eclipse2017.nasa.gov. Archived from the original on 2017-09-18. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
  8. ^ a b c d e Harrington, pp. 9–11
  9. ^ "Transit of Venus, Sun–Earth Day 2012". nasa.gov. from the original on January 14, 2016. Retrieved February 7, 2016.
  10. ^ "Solar Eclipses". University of Tennessee. from the original on June 9, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  11. ^ "How Is the Sun Completely Blocked in an Eclipse?". NASA Space Place. NASA. 2009. from the original on 2021-01-19. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  12. ^ Espenak, Fred (September 26, 2009). "Solar Eclipses for Beginners". MrEclipse.com. from the original on May 24, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  13. ^ Steel, p. 351
  14. ^ a b Espenak, Fred (January 6, 2009). "Central Solar Eclipses: 1991–2050". NASA Eclipse web site. Greenbelt, MD: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. from the original on January 8, 2021. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  15. ^ Verbelen, Felix (November 2003). "Solar Eclipses on Earth, 1001 BC to AD 2500". online.be. from the original on August 3, 2019. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  16. ^ Harrington, pp. 13–14; Steel, pp. 266–279
  17. ^ Mobberley, pp. 30–38
  18. ^ a b c Harrington, pp. 4–5
  19. ^ Hipschman, Ron. "Why Eclipses Happen". Exploratorium. from the original on December 27, 2015. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  20. ^ Brewer, Bryan (January 14, 1998). "What Causes an Eclipse?". Earth View. Archived from the original on January 2, 2013. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  21. ^ NASA – Eclipse 99 – Frequently Asked Questions 2010-05-27 at the Wayback Machine – There is a mistake in the How long will we continue to be able to see total eclipses of the Sun? answer, "...the Sun's angular diameter varies from 32.7 minutes of arc when the Earth is at its farthest point in its orbit (aphelion), and 31.6 arc minutes when it is at its closest (perihelion)." It should appear smaller when farther, so the values should be swapped.
  22. ^ Steel, pp. 319–321
  23. ^ Steel, pp. 317–319
  24. ^ Harrington, pp. 5–7
  25. ^ a b Espenak, Fred (August 28, 2009). "Periodicity of Solar Eclipses". NASA Eclipse web site. Greenbelt, MD: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  26. ^ Espenak, Fred; Meeus, Jean (January 26, 2007). "Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000". NASA Eclipse web site. Greenbelt, MD: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. from the original on October 24, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  27. ^ European Space Agency, "Spacecraft flight dynamics 2019-12-11 at the Wayback Machine: proceedings of an international symposium, 18–22 May 1981-Darmstadt, Germany", p.347
  28. ^ Mobberley, pp. 33–37
  29. ^ . Sydney Observatory. Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  30. ^ Steel, pp. 52–53
  31. ^ a b Seidelmann, P. Kenneth; Urban, Sean E., eds. (2013). Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac (3rd ed.). University Science Books. ISBN 978-1-891389-85-6.
  32. ^ a b c d Meeus, J. (December 2003). "The maximum possible duration of a total solar eclipse". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 113 (6): 343–348. Bibcode:2003JBAA..113..343M.
  33. ^ M. Littman, et al.
  34. ^ Espenak, Fred (March 24, 2008). "World Atlas of Solar Eclipse Paths". NASA Eclipse web site. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  35. ^ Steel, p. 4
  36. ^ For 360 years, see Harrington, p. 9; for 410 years, see Steel, p. 31
  37. ^ Mobberley, pp. 33–36; Steel, p. 258
  38. ^ Beckman, J.; Begot, J.; Charvin, P.; Hall, D.; Lena, P.; Soufflot, A.; Liebenberg, D.; Wraight, P. (1973). "Eclipse Flight of Concorde 001". Nature. 246 (5428): 72–74. Bibcode:1973Natur.246...72B. doi:10.1038/246072a0. S2CID 10644966.
  39. ^ Stephenson, F. Richard (1997). Historical Eclipses and Earth's Rotation. Cambridge University Press. p. 54. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511525186. ISBN 0-521-46194-4. from the original on 2020-08-01. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  40. ^ Mobberley, p. 10
  41. ^ Espenak, Fred (August 28, 2009). "Eclipses and the Saros". NASA Eclipse web site. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Archived from the original on May 24, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  42. ^ Pogo, Alexander (1935). "Calendar years with five solar eclipses". Popular Astronomy. Vol. 43. p. 412. Bibcode:1935PA.....43..412P.
  43. ^ "What are solar eclipses and how often do they occur?". timeanddate.com. from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2014-11-23.
  44. ^ a b Walker, John (July 10, 2004). "Moon near Perigee, Earth near Aphelion". Fourmilab. from the original on December 8, 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2010.
  45. ^ Mayo, Lou. . NASA. Archived from the original on 2017-08-22. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  46. ^ Acta Eruditorum. Leipzig. 1762. p. 168. from the original on 2020-07-31. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
  47. ^ van Gent, Robert Harry. "Astronomical Chronology". University of Utrecht. from the original on July 28, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  48. ^ Harrington, p. 2
  49. ^ Blakeslee, Sandra (November 14, 2006). "Ancient Crash, Epic Wave". The New York Times. from the original on April 11, 2009. Retrieved November 14, 2006.
  50. ^ Klaus Hentschel: Depiction of A Solar Eclipse from 1143 BCE in the Pharaonic Tomb KV9 near Thebes, International Journal of History and Cultural Studies 7,2 (2021): 11-23.
  51. ^ Steel, p. 1
  52. ^ Steel, pp. 84–85
  53. ^ Le Conte, David (December 6, 1998). "Eclipse Quotations". MrEclipse.com. from the original on October 17, 2020. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
  54. ^ Herodotus. Book VII. p. 37. from the original on 2008-08-19. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
  55. ^ Chambers, G. F. (1889). A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 323.
  56. ^ a b c d e Espenak, Fred. . NASA Eclipse web site. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Archived from the original on March 9, 2008. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  57. ^ Herodotus. Book IX. p. 10. from the original on 2020-07-26. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
  58. ^ Schaefer, Bradley E. (May 1994). "Solar Eclipses That Changed the World". Sky & Telescope. Vol. 87, no. 5. pp. 36–39. Bibcode:1994S&T....87...36S.
  59. ^ a b c d e Stephenson, F. Richard (1982). "Historical Eclipses". Scientific American. Vol. 247, no. 4. pp. 154–163. Bibcode:1982SciAm.247d.154S.
  60. ^ Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 3. Taipei: Caves Books. pp. 411–413. OCLC 48999277.
  61. ^ Humphreys, C. J.; Waddington, W. G. (1983). "Dating the Crucifixion". Nature. 306 (5945): 743–746. Bibcode:1983Natur.306..743H. doi:10.1038/306743a0. S2CID 4360560.
  62. ^ Kidger, Mark (1999). The Star of Bethlehem: An Astronomer's View. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 68–72. ISBN 978-0-691-05823-8.
  63. ^ Ó Cróinín, Dáibhí (13 May 2020). . rte.ie. Archived from the original on 2021-01-08. Retrieved January 9, 2021.
  64. ^ Regis Morelon (1996). "General survey of Arabic astronomy". In Roshdi Rashed (ed.). Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science. Vol. I. Routledge. p. 15.
  65. ^ Fiske, John (October 1, 1997). Myths and Myth-Makers Old Tales and Superstitions Interpreted by Comparative Mythology. Project Gutenberg. from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved February 12, 2017.
  66. ^ Espenak, Fred (July 11, 2005). "Eye Safety During Solar Eclipses". NASA Eclipse web site. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Archived from the original on July 16, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  67. ^ Dobson, Roger (August 21, 1999). "UK hospitals assess eye damage after solar eclipse". British Medical Journal. 319 (7208): 469. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7208.469. PMC 1116382. PMID 10454393.
  68. ^ MacRobert, Alan M. (8 August 2006). "How to Watch a Partial Solar Eclipse Safely". Sky & Telescope. Retrieved August 4, 2007.
  69. ^ Chou, B. Ralph (July 11, 2005). "Eye safety during solar eclipses". NASA Eclipse web site. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. from the original on November 14, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  70. ^ Littmann, Mark; Willcox, Ken; Espenak, Fred (1999). "Observing Solar Eclipses Safely". MrEclipse.com. from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  71. ^ Chou, B. Ralph (January 20, 2008). "Eclipse Filters". MrEclipse.com. from the original on November 27, 2020. Retrieved January 4, 2012.
  72. ^ a b "Solar Viewing Safety". Perkins Observatory. from the original on July 14, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  73. ^ a b Harrington, p. 25
  74. ^ Harrington, p. 26
  75. ^ Harrington, p. 40
  76. ^ a b Littmann, Mark; Willcox, Ken; Espenak, Fred (1999). . MrEclipse.com. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  77. ^ Kate Russo (1 August 2012). Total Addiction: The Life of an Eclipse Chaser. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-642-30481-1. from the original on 9 December 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  78. ^ Kelly, Pat (2017-07-06). "Umbraphile, Umbraphilia, Umbraphiles, and Umbraphiliacs – Solar Eclipse with the Sol Alliance". Solar Eclipse with the Sol Alliance. from the original on 2019-08-13. Retrieved 2017-08-24.
  79. ^ . eclipse2017.nasa.gov. Archived from the original on 2017-08-24. Retrieved 2017-08-24.
  80. ^ Wright, Andy (2017-08-16). "Chasing Totality: A Look Into the World of Umbraphiles". Atlas Obscura. from the original on 2020-12-14. Retrieved 2017-08-24.
  81. ^ Kramer, Bill. . Eclipse-chasers.com. Archived from the original on January 29, 2009. Retrieved March 7, 2010.
  82. ^ Vorenkamp, Todd (April 2017). "How to Photograph a Solar Eclipse". B&H Photo Video. from the original on July 1, 2019. Retrieved August 19, 2017.
  83. ^ "The science of eclipses". ESA. September 28, 2004. from the original on August 1, 2012. Retrieved August 4, 2007.
  84. ^ Johnson-Groh, Mara (10 August 2017). "Five Tips from NASA for Photographing the Total Solar Eclipse on Aug. 21". NASA. from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  85. ^ Dravins, Dainis. "Flying Shadows". Lund Observatory. from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  86. ^ Dyson, F.W.; Eddington, A.S.; Davidson, C.R. (1920). "A Determination of the Deflection of Light by the Sun's Gravitational Field, from Observations Made at the Solar eclipse of May 29, 1919". Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A. 220 (571–81): 291–333. Bibcode:1920RSPTA.220..291D. doi:10.1098/rsta.1920.0009. from the original on November 3, 2020. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  87. ^ "Relativity and the 1919 eclipse". ESA. September 13, 2004. from the original on October 21, 2012. Retrieved January 11, 2011.
  88. ^ Steel, pp. 114–120
  89. ^ Allais, Maurice (1959). "Should the Laws of Gravitation be Reconsidered?". Aero/Space Engineering. 9: 46–55.
  90. ^ Saxl, Erwin J.; Allen, Mildred (1971). "1970 solar eclipse as 'seen' by a torsion pendulum". Physical Review D. 3 (4): 823–825. Bibcode:1971PhRvD...3..823S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.3.823.
  91. ^ Wang, Qian-shen; Yang, Xin-she; Wu, Chuan-zhen; Guo, Hong-gang; Liu, Hong-chen; Hua, Chang-chai (2000). "Precise measurement of gravity variations during a total solar eclipse". Physical Review D. 62 (4): 041101(R). arXiv:1003.4947. Bibcode:2000PhRvD..62d1101W. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.62.041101. S2CID 6846335.
  92. ^ Yang, X. S.; Wang, Q. S. (2002). "Gravity anomaly during the Mohe total solar eclipse and new constraint on gravitational shielding parameter". Astrophysics and Space Science. 282 (1): 245–253. Bibcode:2002Ap&SS.282..245Y. doi:10.1023/A:1021119023985. S2CID 118497439.
  93. ^ Meeus, J.; Vitagliano, A. (2004). (PDF). J. Br. Astron. Assoc. 114 (3): 132–135. Bibcode:2004JBAA..114..132M. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 10, 2007.
  94. ^ Grego, Peter (2008). Venus and Mercury, and How to Observe Them. Springer. p. 3. ISBN 978-0387742854.
  95. ^ "ISS-Venustransit". astronomie.info (in German). from the original on 2020-07-28. Retrieved 2004-07-29.
  96. ^ . NASA Johnson Space Center. January 11, 2006. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  97. ^ Nemiroff, R.; Bonnell, J., eds. (August 30, 1999). "Looking Back on an Eclipsed Earth". Astronomy Picture of the Day. NASA. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  98. ^ "Solar Eclipse 2015 – Impact Analysis 2017-02-21 at the Wayback Machine" pp. 3, 6–7, 13. European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity, 19 February 2015. Accessed: 4 March 2015.
  99. ^ "Curve of potential power loss". ing.dk. from the original on 2020-07-28. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
  100. ^ Gray, S. L.; Harrison, R. G. (2012). "Diagnosing eclipse-induced wind changes". Proceedings of the Royal Society. 468 (2143): 1839–1850. Bibcode:2012RSPSA.468.1839G. doi:10.1098/rspa.2012.0007. from the original on 2015-03-04. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
  101. ^ Young, Alex. . NASA. Archived from the original on 2017-09-18. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  102. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  103. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  104. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  105. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  106. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  107. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  108. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  109. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  110. ^ van Gent, R.H. "Solar- and Lunar-Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present". A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles. Utrecht University. Retrieved 6 October 2018.

References

  • Mucke, Hermann; Meeus, Jean (1992). Canon of Solar Eclipses −2003 to +2526 (2 ed.). Vienna: Astronomisches Büro.
  • Harrington, Philip S. (1997). Eclipse! The What, Where, When, Why and How Guide to Watching Solar and Lunar Eclipses. New York: John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0-471-12795-7.
  • Steel, Duncan (1999). Eclipse: The celestial phenomenon which has changed the course of history. London: Headline. ISBN 0-7472-7385-5.
  • Mobberley, Martin (2007). Total Solar Eclipses and How to Observe Them. Astronomers' Observing Guides. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-69827-4.
  • Espenak, Fred (2015). Thousand Year Canon of Solar Eclipses 1501 to 2500. Portal AZ: Astropixels Publishing. ISBN 978-1-941983-02-7.
  • Espenak, Fred (2016). 21st Century Canon of Solar Eclipses. Portal AZ: Astropixels Publishing. ISBN 978-1-941983-12-6.
  • Fotheringham, John Knight (1921). Historical eclipses: being the Halley lecture delivered 17 May 1921. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

External links

Listen to this article
(2 parts, 27 minutes)
 
These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated 3 May 2006 (2006-05-03), and do not reflect subsequent edits.
  • NASA Eclipse Web Site
  • Eclipsewise, Fred Espenak's new eclipse site
  • Andrew Lowe's Eclipse Page, with maps and circumstances for 5000 years of solar eclipses
  • A Guide to Eclipse Activities for Educators, Explaining eclipses in educational settings
  • Detailed eclipse explanations and predictions, Hermit Eclipse
  • Eclipse Photography, Prof. Miroslav Druckmüller
  • , Larry Koehn
  • Five Millennium (−1999 to +3000) Canon of Solar Eclipses Database, Xavier M. Jubier
  • Animated explanation of the mechanics of a solar eclipse 2013-05-25 at the Wayback Machine, University of South Wales
  • Eclipse Image Gallery 2016-10-15 at the Wayback Machine, The World at Night
  • , Photos
  • "Sun, Eclipses of the" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
  • Centered and aligned video recording of Total Solar Eclipse 20th March 2015 on YouTube
  • Solar eclipse photographs taken from the Lick Observatory from the Lick Observatory Records Digital Archive, UC Santa Cruz Library’s Digital Collections 2020-06-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • Video with Total Solar Eclipse March 09 2016 (From the Beginning to the Total Phase) on YouTube
  • Total Solar Eclipse Shadow on Earth March 09 2016 CIMSSSatelite
  • List of all solar eclipses
  • National Geographic Solar Eclipse 101 video 2018-08-04 at the Wayback Machine
  •   Wikiversity has a solar eclipse lab that students can do on any sunny day.

solar, eclipse, video, game, solar, eclipse, video, game, song, solar, eclipse, song, eclipse, redirects, here, other, uses, eclipse, disambiguation, solar, eclipse, occurs, when, moon, passes, between, earth, thereby, obscuring, view, from, small, part, earth. For the video game see Solar Eclipse video game For the song see Solar Eclipse song Eclipse of the Sun redirects here For other uses see Eclipse of the Sun disambiguation A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun thereby obscuring the view of the Sun from a small part of the Earth totally or partially Such an alignment occurs approximately every six months during the eclipse season in its new moon phase when the Moon s orbital plane is closest to the plane of the Earth s orbit 1 In a total eclipse the disk of the Sun is fully obscured by the Moon In partial and annular eclipses only part of the Sun is obscured Unlike a lunar eclipse which may be viewed from anywhere on the night side of Earth a solar eclipse can only be viewed from a relatively small area of the world As such although total solar eclipses occur somewhere on Earth every 18 months on average they recur at any given place only once every 360 to 410 years A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon completely covers the Sun s disk as seen in this 1999 solar eclipse Solar prominences can be seen along the limb in red as well as extensive coronal filaments An annular solar eclipse left occurs when the Moon is too far away to completely cover the Sun s disk May 20 2012 During a partial solar eclipse right the Moon blocks only part of the Sun s disk October 25 2022 If the Moon were in a perfectly circular orbit and in the same orbital plane as Earth there would be total solar eclipses once a month at every new moon Instead because the Moon s orbit is tilted at about 5 degrees to Earth s orbit its shadow usually misses Earth Solar and lunar eclipses therefore happen only during eclipse seasons resulting in at least two and up to five solar eclipses each year no more than two of which can be total 2 3 Total eclipses are more rare because they require a more precise alignment between the centers of the Sun and Moon and because the Moon s apparent size in the sky is sometimes too small to fully cover the Sun An eclipse is a natural phenomenon In some ancient and modern cultures solar eclipses were attributed to supernatural causes or regarded as bad omens Astronomers predictions of eclipses began in China as early as the 4th century BC eclipses hundreds of years into the future may now be predicted with high accuracy Looking directly at the Sun can lead to permanent eye damage so special eye protection or indirect viewing techniques are used when viewing a solar eclipse Only the total phase of a total solar eclipse is safe to view without protection Enthusiasts known as eclipse chasers or umbraphiles travel to remote locations to see solar eclipses 4 5 The symbol for an occultation and especially a solar eclipse is U 1F775 Contents 1 Types 1 1 Terminology for central eclipse 2 Predictions 2 1 Geometry 2 2 Path 2 3 Duration 3 Occurrence and cycles 3 1 Frequency per year 3 2 Final totality 4 Historical eclipses 5 Viewing 5 1 Partial and annular eclipses 5 2 Totality 5 3 Eclipse chasing 5 4 Photography 6 Other observations 6 1 1919 observations 6 2 Gravity anomalies 6 3 Eclipses and transits 6 4 Artificial satellites 6 5 Impact 7 Recent and forthcoming solar eclipses 7 1 1997 2000 7 2 2000 2003 7 3 2004 2007 7 4 2008 2011 7 5 2011 2014 7 6 2015 2018 7 7 2018 2021 7 8 2022 2025 7 9 2026 2029 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksTypes Partial and annular phases of the solar eclipse of May 20 2012 There are four types of solar eclipses A total eclipse occurs when the dark silhouette of the Moon completely obscures the intensely bright light of the Sun allowing the much fainter solar corona to be visible During any one eclipse totality occurs at best only in a narrow track on the surface of Earth 6 This narrow track is called the path of totality 7 An annular eclipse occurs when the Sun and Moon are exactly in line with the Earth but the apparent size of the Moon is smaller than that of the Sun Hence the Sun appears as a very bright ring or annulus surrounding the dark disk of the Moon 8 A hybrid eclipse also called annular total eclipse shifts between a total and annular eclipse At certain points on the surface of Earth it appears as a total eclipse whereas at other points it appears as annular Hybrid eclipses are comparatively rare 8 A partial eclipse occurs when the Sun and Moon are not exactly in line with the Earth and the Moon only partially obscures the Sun This phenomenon can usually be seen from a large part of the Earth outside of the track of an annular or total eclipse However some eclipses can be seen only as a partial eclipse because the umbra passes above the Earth s polar regions and never intersects the Earth s surface 8 Partial eclipses are virtually unnoticeable in terms of the Sun s brightness as it takes well over 90 coverage to notice any darkening at all Even at 99 it would be no darker than civil twilight 9 Comparison of minimum and maximum apparent sizes of the Sun and Moon and planets An annular eclipse can occur when the Sun has a larger apparent size than the Moon whereas a total eclipse can occur when the Moon has a larger apparent size The Sun s distance from Earth is about 400 times the Moon s distance and the Sun s diameter is about 400 times the Moon s diameter Because these ratios are approximately the same the Sun and the Moon as seen from Earth appear to be approximately the same size about 0 5 degree of arc in angular measure 8 The Moon s orbit around the Earth is slightly elliptical as is the Earth s orbit around the Sun The apparent sizes of the Sun and Moon therefore vary 10 The magnitude of an eclipse is the ratio of the apparent size of the Moon to the apparent size of the Sun during an eclipse An eclipse that occurs when the Moon is near its closest distance to Earth i e near its perigee can be a total eclipse because the Moon will appear to be large enough to completely cover the Sun s bright disk or photosphere a total eclipse has a magnitude greater than or equal to 1 000 Conversely an eclipse that occurs when the Moon is near its farthest distance from Earth i e near its apogee can be only an annular eclipse because the Moon will appear to be slightly smaller than the Sun the magnitude of an annular eclipse is less than 1 11 A hybrid eclipse occurs when the magnitude of an eclipse changes during the event from less to greater than one so the eclipse appears to be total at locations nearer the midpoint and annular at other locations nearer the beginning and end since the sides of the Earth are slightly further away from the Moon These eclipses are extremely narrow in their path width and relatively short in their duration at any point compared with fully total eclipses the 2023 April 20 hybrid eclipse s totality is over a minute in duration at various points along the path of totality Like a focal point the width and duration of totality and annularity are near zero at the points where the changes between the two occur 12 Because the Earth s orbit around the Sun is also elliptical the Earth s distance from the Sun similarly varies throughout the year This affects the apparent size of the Sun in the same way but not as much as does the Moon s varying distance from Earth 8 When Earth approaches its farthest distance from the Sun in early July a total eclipse is somewhat more likely whereas conditions favour an annular eclipse when Earth approaches its closest distance to the Sun in early January 13 Terminology for central eclipse Each icon shows the view from the centre of its black spot representing the Moon not to scale Diamond ring effect at third contact the end of totality with visible prominences Central eclipse is often used as a generic term for a total annular or hybrid eclipse 14 This is however not completely correct the definition of a central eclipse is an eclipse during which the central line of the umbra touches the Earth s surface It is possible though extremely rare that part of the umbra intersects with the Earth thus creating an annular or total eclipse but not its central line This is then called a non central total or annular eclipse 14 Gamma is a measure of how centrally the shadow strikes The last umbral yet non central solar eclipse was on April 29 2014 This was an annular eclipse The next non central total solar eclipse will be on April 9 2043 15 The visual phases observed during a total eclipse are called 16 First contact when the Moon s limb edge is exactly tangential to the Sun s limb Second contact starting with Baily s Beads caused by light shining through valleys on the Moon s surface and the diamond ring effect Almost the entire disk is covered Totality the Moon obscures the entire disk of the Sun and only the solar corona is visible Third contact when the first bright light becomes visible and the Moon s shadow is moving away from the observer Again a diamond ring may be observed Fourth contact when the trailing edge of the Moon ceases to overlap with the solar disk and the eclipse ends PredictionsGeometry Geometry of a total solar eclipse not to scale The diagrams to the right show the alignment of the Sun Moon and Earth during a solar eclipse The dark gray region between the Moon and Earth is the umbra where the Sun is completely obscured by the Moon The small area where the umbra touches Earth s surface is where a total eclipse can be seen The larger light gray area is the penumbra in which a partial eclipse can be seen An observer in the antumbra the area of shadow beyond the umbra will see an annular eclipse 17 The Moon s orbit around the Earth is inclined at an angle of just over 5 degrees to the plane of the Earth s orbit around the Sun the ecliptic Because of this at the time of a new moon the Moon will usually pass to the north or south of the Sun A solar eclipse can occur only when a new moon occurs close to one of the points known as nodes where the Moon s orbit crosses the ecliptic 18 As noted above the Moon s orbit is also elliptical The Moon s distance from the Earth can vary by about 6 from its average value Therefore the Moon s apparent size varies with its distance from the Earth and it is this effect that leads to the difference between total and annular eclipses The distance of the Earth from the Sun also varies during the year but this is a smaller effect On average the Moon appears to be slightly smaller than the Sun as seen from the Earth so the majority about 60 of central eclipses are annular It is only when the Moon is closer to the Earth than average near its perigee that a total eclipse occurs 19 20 Moon SunAt perigee nearest At apogee farthest At perihelion nearest At aphelion farthest Mean radius 1 737 10 km 1 079 38 mi 696 000 km 432 000 mi Distance 363 104 km 225 622 mi 405 696 km 252 088 mi 147 098 070 km 91 402 500 mi 152 097 700 km 94 509 100 mi Angulardiameter 21 33 30 0 5583 29 26 0 4905 32 42 0 5450 31 36 0 5267 Apparent sizeto scale Order bydecreasingapparent size 1st 4th 2nd 3rdThe Moon orbits the Earth in approximately 27 3 days relative to a fixed frame of reference This is known as the sidereal month However during one sidereal month Earth has revolved part way around the Sun making the average time between one new moon and the next longer than the sidereal month it is approximately 29 5 days This is known as the synodic month and corresponds to what is commonly called the lunar month 18 The Moon crosses from south to north of the ecliptic at its ascending node and vice versa at its descending node 18 However the nodes of the Moon s orbit are gradually moving in a retrograde motion due to the action of the Sun s gravity on the Moon s motion and they make a complete circuit every 18 6 years This regression means that the time between each passage of the Moon through the ascending node is slightly shorter than the sidereal month This period is called the nodical or draconic month 22 Finally the Moon s perigee is moving forwards or precessing in its orbit and makes a complete circuit in 8 85 years The time between one perigee and the next is slightly longer than the sidereal month and known as the anomalistic month 23 The Moon s orbit intersects with the ecliptic at the two nodes that are 180 degrees apart Therefore the new moon occurs close to the nodes at two periods of the year approximately six months 173 3 days apart known as eclipse seasons and there will always be at least one solar eclipse during these periods Sometimes the new moon occurs close enough to a node during two consecutive months to eclipse the Sun on both occasions in two partial eclipses This means that in any given year there will always be at least two solar eclipses and there can be as many as five 24 Eclipses can occur only when the Sun is within about 15 to 18 degrees of a node 10 to 12 degrees for central eclipses This is referred to as an eclipse limit and is given in ranges because the apparent sizes and speeds of the Sun and Moon vary throughout the year In the time it takes for the Moon to return to a node draconic month the apparent position of the Sun has moved about 29 degrees relative to the nodes 2 Since the eclipse limit creates a window of opportunity of up to 36 degrees 24 degrees for central eclipses it is possible for partial eclipses or rarely a partial and a central eclipse to occur in consecutive months 25 26 Fraction of the Sun s disc covered f when the same sized discs are offset a fraction t of their diameter 27 Path During a central eclipse the Moon s umbra or antumbra in the case of an annular eclipse moves rapidly from west to east across the Earth The Earth is also rotating from west to east at about 28 km min at the Equator but as the Moon is moving in the same direction as the Earth s rotation at about 61 km min the umbra almost always appears to move in a roughly west east direction across a map of the Earth at the speed of the Moon s orbital velocity minus the Earth s rotational velocity 28 The width of the track of a central eclipse varies according to the relative apparent diameters of the Sun and Moon In the most favourable circumstances when a total eclipse occurs very close to perigee the track can be up to 267 km 166 mi wide and the duration of totality may be over 7 minutes 29 Outside of the central track a partial eclipse is seen over a much larger area of the Earth Typically the umbra is 100 160 km wide while the penumbral diameter is in excess of 6400 km 30 Besselian elements are used to predict whether an eclipse will be partial annular or total or annular total and what the eclipse circumstances will be at any given location 31 Chapter 11 Calculations with Besselian elements can determine the exact shape of the umbra s shadow on the Earth s surface But at what longitudes on the Earth s surface the shadow will fall is a function of the Earth s rotation and on how much that rotation has slowed down over time A number called DT is used in eclipse prediction to take this slowing into account As the Earth slows DT increases DT for dates in the future can only be roughly estimated because the Earth s rotation is slowing irregularly This means that although it is possible to predict that there will be a total eclipse on a certain date in the far future it is not possible to predict in the far future exactly at what longitudes that eclipse will be total Historical records of eclipses allow estimates of past values of DT and so of the Earth s rotation 31 Equation 11 132 Duration This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available May 2022 The following factors determine the duration of a total solar eclipse in order of decreasing importance 32 33 The Moon being almost exactly at perigee making its angular diameter as large as possible The Earth being very near aphelion furthest away from the Sun in its elliptical orbit making its angular diameter nearly as small as possible The midpoint of the eclipse being very close to the Earth s equator where the rotational velocity is greatest and is closest to the speed of the lunar shadow moving over Earth s surface The vector of the eclipse path at the midpoint of the eclipse aligning with the vector of the Earth s rotation i e not diagonal but due east The midpoint of the eclipse being near the subsolar point the part of the Earth closest to the Sun The longest eclipse that has been calculated thus far is the eclipse of July 16 2186 with a maximum duration of 7 minutes 29 seconds over northern Guyana 32 Occurrence and cyclesMain article Eclipse cycle As the Earth revolves around the Sun approximate axial parallelism of the Moon s orbital plane tilted five degrees to the Earth s orbital plane results in the revolution of the lunar nodes relative to the Earth This causes an eclipse season approximately every six months in which a solar eclipse can occur at the new moon phase and a lunar eclipse can occur at the full moon phase Total solar eclipse paths 1001 2000 showing that total solar eclipses occur almost everywhere on Earth This image was merged from 50 separate images from NASA 34 Total solar eclipses are rare events Although they occur somewhere on Earth every 18 months on average 35 it is estimated that they recur at any given place only once every 360 to 410 years on average 36 The total eclipse lasts for only a maximum of a few minutes at any location because the Moon s umbra moves eastward at over 1700 km h 37 Totality currently can never last more than 7 min 32 s This value changes over the millennia and is currently decreasing By the 8th millennium the longest theoretically possible total eclipse will be less than 7 min 2 s 32 The last time an eclipse longer than 7 minutes occurred was June 30 1973 7 min 3 sec Observers aboard a Concorde supersonic aircraft were able to stretch totality for this eclipse to about 74 minutes by flying along the path of the Moon s umbra 38 The next total eclipse exceeding seven minutes in duration will not occur until June 25 2150 The longest total solar eclipse during the 11 000 year period from 3000 BC to at least 8000 AD will occur on July 16 2186 when totality will last 7 min 29 s 32 39 For comparison the longest total eclipse of the 20th century at 7 min 8 s occurred on June 20 1955 and there will be no total solar eclipses over 7 min in duration in the 21st century 40 It is possible to predict other eclipses using eclipse cycles The saros is probably the best known and one of the most accurate A saros lasts 6 585 3 days a little over 18 years which means that after this period a practically identical eclipse will occur The most notable difference will be a westward shift of about 120 in longitude due to the 0 3 days and a little in latitude north south for odd numbered cycles the reverse for even numbered ones A saros series always starts with a partial eclipse near one of Earth s polar regions then shifts over the globe through a series of annular or total eclipses and ends with a partial eclipse at the opposite polar region A saros series lasts 1226 to 1550 years and 69 to 87 eclipses with about 40 to 60 of them being central 41 Frequency per year Between two and five solar eclipses occur every year with at least one per eclipse season Since the Gregorian calendar was instituted in 1582 years that have had five solar eclipses were 1693 1758 1805 1823 1870 and 1935 The next occurrence will be 2206 42 On average there are about 240 solar eclipses each century 43 The 5 solar eclipses of 1935 January 5 February 3 June 30 July 30 December 25Partial south Partial north Partial north Partial south Annular south Saros 111 Saros 149 Saros 116 Saros 154 Saros 121Final totality Total solar eclipses are seen on Earth because of a fortuitous combination of circumstances Even on Earth the diversity of eclipses familiar to people today is a temporary on a geological time scale phenomenon Hundreds of millions of years in the past the Moon was closer to the Earth and therefore apparently larger so every solar eclipse was total or partial and there were no annular eclipses Due to tidal acceleration the orbit of the Moon around the Earth becomes approximately 3 8 cm more distant each year Millions of years in the future the Moon will be too far away to fully occlude the Sun and no total eclipses will occur In the same timeframe the Sun may become brighter making it appear larger in size 44 Estimates of the time when the Moon will be unable to occlude the entire Sun when viewed from the Earth range between 650 million 45 and 1 4 billion years in the future 44 Historical eclipses Astronomers Studying an Eclipse painted by Antoine Caron in 1571 Historical eclipses are a very valuable resource for historians in that they allow a few historical events to be dated precisely from which other dates and ancient calendars may be deduced 46 A solar eclipse of June 15 763 BC mentioned in an Assyrian text is important for the chronology of the ancient Near East 47 There have been other claims to date earlier eclipses The legendary Chinese king Zhong Kang supposedly beheaded two astronomers Hsi and Ho who failed to predict an eclipse 4 000 years ago 48 Perhaps the earliest still unproven claim is that of archaeologist Bruce Masse who putatively links an eclipse that occurred on May 10 2807 BC with a possible meteor impact in the Indian Ocean on the basis of several ancient flood myths that mention a total solar eclipse 49 The earliest preserved depiction of a partial solar eclipse from 1143 BCE might be the one in tomb KV9 of Ramses V and Ramses VI 50 Records of the solar eclipses of 993 and 1004 as well as the lunar eclipses of 1001 and 1002 by Ibn Yunus of Cairo c 1005 Eclipses have been interpreted as omens or portents 51 The ancient Greek historian Herodotus wrote that Thales of Miletus predicted an eclipse that occurred during a battle between the Medes and the Lydians Both sides put down their weapons and declared peace as a result of the eclipse 52 The exact eclipse involved remains uncertain although the issue has been studied by hundreds of ancient and modern authorities One likely candidate took place on May 28 585 BC probably near the Halys river in Asia Minor 53 An eclipse recorded by Herodotus before Xerxes departed for his expedition against Greece 54 which is traditionally dated to 480 BC was matched by John Russell Hind to an annular eclipse of the Sun at Sardis on February 17 478 BC 55 Alternatively a partial eclipse was visible from Persia on October 2 480 BC 56 Herodotus also reports a solar eclipse at Sparta during the Second Persian invasion of Greece 57 The date of the eclipse August 1 477 BC does not match exactly the conventional dates for the invasion accepted by historians 58 Chinese records of eclipses begin at around 720 BC 59 The 4th century BC astronomer Shi Shen described the prediction of eclipses by using the relative positions of the Moon and Sun 60 Attempts have been made to establish the exact date of Good Friday by assuming that the darkness described at Jesus s crucifixion was a solar eclipse This research has not yielded conclusive results 61 62 and Good Friday is recorded as being at Passover which is held at the time of a full moon Further the darkness lasted from the sixth hour to the ninth or three hours which is much much longer than the eight minute upper limit for any solar eclipse s totality Contemporary chronicles wrote about an eclipse at the beginning of May 664 that coincided with the beginning of the plague of 664 in the British isles 63 In the Western hemisphere there are few reliable records of eclipses before AD 800 until the advent of Arab and monastic observations in the early medieval period 59 The Cairo astronomer Ibn Yunus wrote that the calculation of eclipses was one of the many things that connect astronomy with the Islamic law because it allowed knowing when a special prayer can be made 64 The first recorded observation of the corona was made in Constantinople in AD 968 56 59 Erhard Weigel predicted course of moon shadow on 12 August 1654 O S 2 August The first known telescopic observation of a total solar eclipse was made in France in 1706 59 Nine years later English astronomer Edmund Halley accurately predicted and observed the solar eclipse of May 3 1715 56 59 By the mid 19th century scientific understanding of the Sun was improving through observations of the Sun s corona during solar eclipses The corona was identified as part of the Sun s atmosphere in 1842 and the first photograph or daguerreotype of a total eclipse was taken of the solar eclipse of July 28 1851 56 Spectroscope observations were made of the solar eclipse of August 18 1868 which helped to determine the chemical composition of the Sun 56 John Fiske summed up myths about the solar eclipse like this in his 1872 book Myth and Myth Makers the myth of Hercules and Cacus the fundamental idea is the victory of the solar god over the robber who steals the light Now whether the robber carries off the light in the evening when Indra has gone to sleep or boldly rears his black form against the sky during the daytime causing darkness to spread over the earth would make little difference to the framers of the myth To a chicken a solar eclipse is the same thing as nightfall and he goes to roost accordingly Why then should the primitive thinker have made a distinction between the darkening of the sky caused by black clouds and that caused by the rotation of the earth He had no more conception of the scientific explanation of these phenomena than the chicken has of the scientific explanation of an eclipse For him it was enough to know that the solar radiance was stolen in the one case as in the other and to suspect that the same demon was to blame for both robberies 65 Viewing source source source source source source source source source source source source source source 2017 total solar eclipse viewed in real time with audience reactions Looking directly at the photosphere of the Sun the bright disk of the Sun itself even for just a few seconds can cause permanent damage to the retina of the eye because of the intense visible and invisible radiation that the photosphere emits This damage can result in impairment of vision up to and including blindness The retina has no sensitivity to pain and the effects of retinal damage may not appear for hours so there is no warning that injury is occurring 66 67 Under normal conditions the Sun is so bright that it is difficult to stare at it directly However during an eclipse with so much of the Sun covered it is easier and more tempting to stare at it Looking at the Sun during an eclipse is as dangerous as looking at it outside an eclipse except during the brief period of totality when the Sun s disk is completely covered totality occurs only during a total eclipse and only very briefly it does not occur during a partial or annular eclipse Viewing the Sun s disk through any kind of optical aid binoculars a telescope or even an optical camera viewfinder is extremely hazardous and can cause irreversible eye damage within a fraction of a second 68 69 Partial and annular eclipses Eclipse glasses filter out eye damaging radiation allowing direct viewing of the Sun during all partial eclipse phases they are not used during totality when the Sun is completely eclipsed Pinhole projection method of observing partial solar eclipse Insert upper left partially eclipsed Sun photographed with a white solar filter Main image projections of the partially eclipsed Sun bottom right Viewing the Sun during partial and annular eclipses and during total eclipses outside the brief period of totality requires special eye protection or indirect viewing methods if eye damage is to be avoided The Sun s disk can be viewed using appropriate filtration to block the harmful part of the Sun s radiation Sunglasses do not make viewing the Sun safe Only properly designed and certified solar filters should be used for direct viewing of the Sun s disk 70 Especially self made filters using common objects such as a floppy disk removed from its case a Compact Disc a black colour slide film smoked glass etc must be avoided 71 72 The safest way to view the Sun s disk is by indirect projection 73 This can be done by projecting an image of the disk onto a white piece of paper or card using a pair of binoculars with one of the lenses covered a telescope or another piece of cardboard with a small hole in it about 1 mm diameter often called a pinhole camera The projected image of the Sun can then be safely viewed this technique can be used to observe sunspots as well as eclipses Care must be taken however to ensure that no one looks through the projector telescope pinhole etc directly 74 Viewing the Sun s disk on a video display screen provided by a video camera or digital camera is safe although the camera itself may be damaged by direct exposure to the Sun The optical viewfinders provided with some video and digital cameras are not safe Securely mounting 14 welder s glass in front of the lens and viewfinder protects the equipment and makes viewing possible 72 Professional workmanship is essential because of the dire consequences any gaps or detaching mountings will have In the partial eclipse path one will not be able to see the corona or nearly complete darkening of the sky However depending on how much of the Sun s disk is obscured some darkening may be noticeable If three quarters or more of the Sun is obscured then an effect can be observed by which the daylight appears to be dim as if the sky were overcast yet objects still cast sharp shadows 75 Totality Solar eclipse of August 21 2017 Baily s beads sunlight visible through lunar valleys Composite image with corona prominences and diamond ring effect When the shrinking visible part of the photosphere becomes very small Baily s beads will occur These are caused by the sunlight still being able to reach the Earth through lunar valleys Totality then begins with the diamond ring effect the last bright flash of sunlight 76 It is safe to observe the total phase of a solar eclipse directly only when the Sun s photosphere is completely covered by the Moon and not before or after totality 73 During this period the Sun is too dim to be seen through filters The Sun s faint corona will be visible and the chromosphere solar prominences and possibly even a solar flare may be seen At the end of totality the same effects will occur in reverse order and on the opposite side of the Moon 76 Eclipse chasing Main article Eclipse chasing A dedicated group of eclipse chasers have pursued the observation of solar eclipses when they occur around the Earth 77 A person who chases eclipses is known as an umbraphile meaning shadow lover 78 Umbraphiles travel for eclipses and use various tools to help view the sun including solar viewing glasses also known as eclipse glasses as well as telescopes 79 80 Photography The progression of a solar eclipse on August 1 2008 in Novosibirsk Russia All times UTC local time was UTC 7 The time span between shots is three minutes Photographing an eclipse is possible with fairly common camera equipment In order for the disk of the Sun Moon to be easily visible a fairly high magnification long focus lens is needed at least 200 mm for a 35 mm camera and for the disk to fill most of the frame a longer lens is needed over 500 mm As with viewing the Sun directly looking at it through the optical viewfinder of a camera can produce damage to the retina so care is recommended 81 Solar filters are required for digital photography even if an optical viewfinder is not used Using a camera s live view feature or an electronic viewfinder is safe for the human eye but the Sun s rays could potentially irreparably damage digital image sensors unless the lens is covered by a properly designed solar filter 82 Other observationsA total solar eclipse provides a rare opportunity to observe the corona the outer layer of the Sun s atmosphere Normally this is not visible because the photosphere is much brighter than the corona According to the point reached in the solar cycle the corona may appear small and symmetric or large and fuzzy It is very hard to predict this in advance 83 Pinholes in shadows during no eclipse 1 amp 4 a partial eclipse 2 amp 5 and an annular eclipse 3 amp 6 As the light filters through leaves of trees during a partial eclipse the overlapping leaves create natural pinholes displaying mini eclipses on the ground 84 Phenomena associated with eclipses include shadow bands also known as flying shadows which are similar to shadows on the bottom of a swimming pool They occur only just prior to and after totality when a narrow solar crescent acts as an anisotropic light source 85 1919 observations See also Tests of general relativity Deflection of light by the Sun Eddington s original photograph of the 1919 eclipse which provided evidence for Einstein s theory of general relativity The observation of a total solar eclipse of May 29 1919 helped to confirm Einstein s theory of general relativity By comparing the apparent distance between stars in the constellation Taurus with and without the Sun between them Arthur Eddington stated that the theoretical predictions about gravitational lenses were confirmed 86 The observation with the Sun between the stars was possible only during totality since the stars are then visible Though Eddington s observations were near the experimental limits of accuracy at the time work in the later half of the 20th century confirmed his results 87 88 Gravity anomalies There is a long history of observations of gravity related phenomena during solar eclipses especially during the period of totality In 1954 and again in 1959 Maurice Allais reported observations of strange and unexplained movement during solar eclipses 89 The reality of this phenomenon named the Allais effect has remained controversial Similarly in 1970 Saxl and Allen observed the sudden change in motion of a torsion pendulum this phenomenon is called the Saxl effect 90 Observation during the 1997 solar eclipse by Wang et al suggested a possible gravitational shielding effect 91 which generated debate In 2002 Wang and a collaborator published detailed data analysis which suggested that the phenomenon still remains unexplained 92 Eclipses and transits In principle the simultaneous occurrence of a solar eclipse and a transit of a planet is possible But these events are extremely rare because of their short durations The next anticipated simultaneous occurrence of a solar eclipse and a transit of Mercury will be on July 5 6757 and a solar eclipse and a transit of Venus is expected on April 5 15232 93 More common but still infrequent is a conjunction of a planet especially but not only Mercury or Venus at the time of a total solar eclipse in which event the planet will be visible very near the eclipsed Sun when without the eclipse it would have been lost in the Sun s glare At one time some scientists hypothesized that there may be a planet often given the name Vulcan even closer to the Sun than Mercury the only way to confirm its existence would have been to observe it in transit or during a total solar eclipse No such planet was ever found and general relativity has since explained the observations that led astronomers to suggest that Vulcan might exist 94 Artificial satellites The Moon s shadow over Turkey and Cyprus seen from the ISS during a 2006 total solar eclipse A composite image showing the ISS transit of the Sun while the 2017 solar eclipse was in progress Artificial satellites can also pass in front of the Sun as seen from the Earth but none is large enough to cause an eclipse At the altitude of the International Space Station for example an object would need to be about 3 35 km 2 08 mi across to blot the Sun out entirely These transits are difficult to watch because the zone of visibility is very small The satellite passes over the face of the Sun in about a second typically As with a transit of a planet it will not get dark 95 Observations of eclipses from spacecraft or artificial satellites orbiting above the Earth s atmosphere are not subject to weather conditions The crew of Gemini 12 observed a total solar eclipse from space in 1966 96 The partial phase of the 1999 total eclipse was visible from Mir 97 Impact The solar eclipse of March 20 2015 was the first occurrence of an eclipse estimated to potentially have a significant impact on the power system with the electricity sector taking measures to mitigate any impact The continental Europe and Great Britain synchronous areas were estimated to have about 90 gigawatts of solar power and it was estimated that production would temporarily decrease by up to 34 GW compared to a clear sky day 98 99 Eclipses may cause the temperature to decrease by 3 C with wind power potentially decreasing as winds are reduced by 0 7 m s 100 In addition to the drop in light level and air temperature animals change their behavior during totality For example birds and squirrels return to their nests and crickets chirp 101 Recent and forthcoming solar eclipsesMain article List of solar eclipses in the 21st century Further information Lists of solar eclipses Eclipse path for total and hybrid eclipses from 2021 to 2040 Eclipses occur only in the eclipse season when the Sun is close to either the ascending or descending node of the Moon Each eclipse is separated by one five or six lunations synodic months and the midpoint of each season is separated by 173 3 days which is the mean time for the Sun to travel from one node to the next The period is a little less than half a calendar year because the lunar nodes slowly regress Because 223 synodic months is roughly equal to 239 anomalistic months and 242 draconic months eclipses with similar geometry recur 223 synodic months about 6 585 3 days apart This period 18 years 11 3 days is a saros Because 223 synodic months is not identical to 239 anomalistic months or 242 draconic months saros cycles do not endlessly repeat Each cycle begins with the Moon s shadow crossing the Earth near the north or south pole and subsequent events progress toward the other pole until the Moon s shadow misses the Earth and the series ends 25 Saros cycles are numbered currently cycles 117 to 156 are active citation needed 1997 2000 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 102 Solar eclipse series sets from 1997 2000 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma120 Chita Russia 1997 March 09 Total 0 91830 125 1997 September 02 Partial south 1 03521130 Total eclipse near Guadeloupe 1998 February 26 Total 0 23909 135 1998 August 22 Annular 0 26441140 1999 February 16 Annular 0 47260 145 Totality from France 1999 August 11 Total 0 50623150 2000 February 05 Partial south 1 22325 155 2000 July 31 Partial north 1 21664Partial solar eclipses on July 1 2000 and December 25 2000 occur in the next lunar year eclipse set 2000 2003 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 103 Partial solar eclipses on February 5 2000 and July 31 2000 occur in the previous lunar year set Solar eclipse series sets from 2000 2003 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma117 2000 July 01 Partial south 1 28214 122 2000 December 25 Partial north 1 13669127 Totality from Lusaka Zambia 2001 June 21 Total 0 57013 132 Partial from Minneapolis MN 2001 December 14 Annular 0 40885137 Partial from Los Angeles CA 2002 June 10 Annular 0 19933 142 Totality from Woomera 2002 December 04 Total 0 30204147 Culloden Scotland 2003 May 31 Annular 0 99598 152 2003 November 23 Total 0 963812004 2007 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 104 Solar eclipse series sets from 2004 2007 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma119 2004 April 19 Partial south 1 13345 124 2004 October 14 Partial north 1 03481129 Partial from Naiguata 2005 April 08 Hybrid 0 34733 134 Annular from Madrid Spain 2005 October 03 Annular 0 33058139 Total from Side Turkey 2006 March 29 Total 0 38433 144 Partial from Sao Paulo Brazil 2006 September 22 Annular 0 40624149 From Jaipur India 2007 March 19 Partial north 1 07277 154 From Cordoba Argentina 2007 September 11 Partial south 1 125522008 2011 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 105 Solar eclipse series sets from 2008 2011 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma121 Partial from Christchurch NZ 2008 February 07 Annular 0 95701 126 Novosibirsk Russia 2008 August 01 Total 0 83070131 Palangka Raya Indonesia 2009 January 26 Annular 0 28197 136 Kurigram Bangladesh 2009 July 22 Total 0 06977141 Bangui Central African Republic 2010 January 15 Annular 0 40016 146 Hao French Polynesia 2010 July 11 Total 0 67877151 Partial from Vienna Austria 2011 January 04 Partial north 1 06265 156 2011 July 01 Partial south 1 49171Partial solar eclipses on June 1 2011 and November 25 2011 occur on the next lunar year eclipse set 2011 2014 This eclipse is a member of the 2011 2014 solar eclipse semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 106 Note 1 Solar eclipse series sets from 2011 2014 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma118 Partial from Tromso Norway 2011 June 01 Partial north 1 21300 123 2011 November 25 Partial south 1 05359128 Middlegate Nevada 2012 May 20 Annular 0 48279 133 Cairns Australia 2012 November 13 Total 0 37189138 Churchills Head Australia 2013 May 10 Annular 0 26937 143 Partial from Libreville Gabon 2013 November 03 Hybrid 0 32715148 Partial from Adelaide Australia 2014 April 29 Annular non central 0 99996 153 Partial from Minneapolis 2014 October 23 Partial north 1 090782015 2018 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 107 Solar eclipse series sets from 2015 2018 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma120 Longyearbyen Svalbard 2015 March 20 Total 0 94536 125 Solar Dynamics Observatory 2015 September 13 Partial south 1 10039130 Balikpapan Indonesia 2016 March 9 Total 0 26092 135 L Etang Sale Reunion 2016 September 1 Annular 0 33301140 Partial from Buenos Aires 2017 February 26 Annular 0 45780 145 Casper Wyoming 2017 August 21 Total 0 43671150 Partial from Olivos Buenos Aires 2018 February 15 Partial south 1 21163 155 Partial from Huittinen Finland 2018 August 11 Partial north 1 14758Partial solar eclipses on July 13 2018 and January 6 2019 occur during the next semester series 2018 2021 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 108 Note Partial solar eclipses on February 15 2018 and August 11 2018 occurred during the previous semester series Solar eclipse series sets from 2018 2021 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma117 Partial from Melbourne Australia 2018 July 13 Partial 1 35423 122 Partial from Nakhodka Russia 2019 January 6 Partial 1 14174127 La Serena Chile 2019 July 2 Total 0 64656 132 Jaffna Sri Lanka 2019 December 26 Annular 0 41351137 Beigang Yunlin Taiwan 2020 June 21 Annular 0 12090 142 Gorbea Chile 2020 December 14 Total 0 29394147 Partial from Halifax Canada 2021 June 10 Annular 0 91516 152 2021 December 4 Total 0 952612022 2025 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 109 Solar eclipse series sets from 2022 2025 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma119 Partial from Santiago Chile 2022 April 30 Partial 1 19008 124 Partial from Saratov Russia 2022 October 25 Partial 1 07014129 Partial fromMagetan Indonesia 2023 April 20 Hybrid 0 39515 134 2023 October 14 Annular 0 37534139 2024 April 8 Total 0 34314 144 2024 October 2 Annular 0 35087149 2025 March 29 Partial 1 04053 154 2025 September 21 Partial 1 065092026 2029 This eclipse is a member of a semester series An eclipse in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours a semester at alternating nodes of the Moon s orbit 110 Solar eclipse series sets from 2026 2029 Ascending node Descending nodeSaros Map Gamma Saros Map Gamma121 2026 February 17 Annular 0 97427 126 2026 August 12 Total 0 89774131 2027 February 6 Annular 0 29515 136 2027 August 2 Total 0 14209141 2028 January 26 Annular 0 39014 146 2028 July 22 Total 0 60557151 2029 January 14 Partial 1 05532 156 2029 July 11 Partial 1 41908Partial solar eclipses on June 12 2029 and December 5 2029 occur in the next lunar year eclipse set See alsoLists of solar eclipses List of films featuring eclipses Apollo Soyuz First joint U S Soviet space flight Mission included an arranged eclipse of the Sun by the Apollo module to allow instruments on the Soyuz to take photographs of the solar corona Eclipse chasing Travel to eclipse locations for study and enjoyment Occultation generic term for occlusion of an object by another object that passes between it and the observer thus revealing for example the presence of an exoplanet orbiting a distant star by eclipsing it as seen from the earth Solar eclipses in fiction Solar eclipses on the Moon eclipse of the sun by planet Earth as seen from the moon Lunar eclipse A solar eclipse of the moon as seen from Earth the shadow cast on the moon by that eclipse Transit of Venus passage of the planet Venus between the Sun and the Earth as seen from Earth Technically a partial eclipse Transit of Deimos from Mars passage of the Martian moon Deimos between the Sun and Mars as seen from Mars Transit of Phobos from Mars passage of the Martian moon Phobos between the Sun and Mars as seen from Mars Footnotes The partial solar eclipses of January 4 2011 and July 1 2011 occurred in the previous semester series Notes What is an eclipse European Space Agency Archived from the original on 2018 08 04 Retrieved 2018 08 04 a b Littmann Mark Espenak Fred Willcox Ken 2008 Totality Eclipses of the Sun Oxford University Press pp 18 19 ISBN 978 0 19 953209 4 Five solar eclipses occurred in 1935 NASA September 6 2009 Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses NASA Eclipse Web Site Fred Espenak Project and Website Manager Archived from the original on April 29 2010 Retrieved January 26 2010 Koukkos Christina May 14 2009 Eclipse Chasing in Pursuit of Total Awe The New York Times Archived from the original on June 26 2018 Retrieved January 15 2012 Pasachoff Jay M July 10 2010 Why I Never Miss a Solar Eclipse The New York Times Archived from the original on June 26 2018 Retrieved January 15 2012 Harrington pp 7 8 Eclipse Who What Where When and How Total Solar Eclipse 2017 eclipse2017 nasa gov Archived from the original on 2017 09 18 Retrieved 2017 09 21 a b c d e Harrington pp 9 11 Transit of Venus Sun Earth Day 2012 nasa gov Archived from the original on January 14 2016 Retrieved February 7 2016 Solar Eclipses University of Tennessee Archived from the original on June 9 2015 Retrieved January 15 2012 How Is the Sun Completely Blocked in an Eclipse NASA Space Place NASA 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 01 19 Retrieved 2019 09 01 Espenak Fred September 26 2009 Solar Eclipses for Beginners MrEclipse com Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved January 15 2012 Steel p 351 a b Espenak Fred January 6 2009 Central Solar Eclipses 1991 2050 NASA Eclipse web site Greenbelt MD NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on January 8 2021 Retrieved January 15 2012 Verbelen Felix November 2003 Solar Eclipses on Earth 1001 BC to AD 2500 online be Archived from the original on August 3 2019 Retrieved January 15 2012 Harrington pp 13 14 Steel pp 266 279 Mobberley pp 30 38 a b c Harrington pp 4 5 Hipschman Ron Why Eclipses Happen Exploratorium Archived from the original on December 27 2015 Retrieved January 14 2012 Brewer Bryan January 14 1998 What Causes an Eclipse Earth View Archived from the original on January 2 2013 Retrieved January 14 2012 NASA Eclipse 99 Frequently Asked Questions Archived 2010 05 27 at the Wayback Machine There is a mistake in the How long will we continue to be able to see total eclipses of the Sun answer the Sun s angular diameter varies from 32 7 minutes of arc when the Earth is at its farthest point in its orbit aphelion and 31 6 arc minutes when it is at its closest perihelion It should appear smaller when farther so the values should be swapped Steel pp 319 321 Steel pp 317 319 Harrington pp 5 7 a b Espenak Fred August 28 2009 Periodicity of Solar Eclipses NASA Eclipse web site Greenbelt MD NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 Espenak Fred Meeus Jean January 26 2007 Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses 1999 to 3000 NASA Eclipse web site Greenbelt MD NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 European Space Agency Spacecraft flight dynamics Archived 2019 12 11 at the Wayback Machine proceedings of an international symposium 18 22 May 1981 Darmstadt Germany p 347 Mobberley pp 33 37 How do eclipses such as the one on Wednesday 14 November 2012 occur Sydney Observatory Archived from the original on 29 April 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Steel pp 52 53 a b Seidelmann P Kenneth Urban Sean E eds 2013 Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac 3rd ed University Science Books ISBN 978 1 891389 85 6 a b c d Meeus J December 2003 The maximum possible duration of a total solar eclipse Journal of the British Astronomical Association 113 6 343 348 Bibcode 2003JBAA 113 343M M Littman et al Espenak Fred March 24 2008 World Atlas of Solar Eclipse Paths NASA Eclipse web site NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Steel p 4 For 360 years see Harrington p 9 for 410 years see Steel p 31 Mobberley pp 33 36 Steel p 258 Beckman J Begot J Charvin P Hall D Lena P Soufflot A Liebenberg D Wraight P 1973 Eclipse Flight of Concorde 001 Nature 246 5428 72 74 Bibcode 1973Natur 246 72B doi 10 1038 246072a0 S2CID 10644966 Stephenson F Richard 1997 Historical Eclipses and Earth s Rotation Cambridge University Press p 54 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511525186 ISBN 0 521 46194 4 Archived from the original on 2020 08 01 Retrieved 2012 01 04 Mobberley p 10 Espenak Fred August 28 2009 Eclipses and the Saros NASA Eclipse web site NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on May 24 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Pogo Alexander 1935 Calendar years with five solar eclipses Popular Astronomy Vol 43 p 412 Bibcode 1935PA 43 412P What are solar eclipses and how often do they occur timeanddate com Archived from the original on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2014 11 23 a b Walker John July 10 2004 Moon near Perigee Earth near Aphelion Fourmilab Archived from the original on December 8 2013 Retrieved March 7 2010 Mayo Lou WHAT S UP The Very Last Solar Eclipse NASA Archived from the original on 2017 08 22 Retrieved 22 August 2017 Acta Eruditorum Leipzig 1762 p 168 Archived from the original on 2020 07 31 Retrieved 2018 06 06 van Gent Robert Harry Astronomical Chronology University of Utrecht Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 Harrington p 2 Blakeslee Sandra November 14 2006 Ancient Crash Epic Wave The New York Times Archived from the original on April 11 2009 Retrieved November 14 2006 Klaus Hentschel Depiction of A Solar Eclipse from 1143 BCE in the Pharaonic Tomb KV9 near Thebes International Journal of History and Cultural Studies 7 2 2021 11 23 Steel p 1 Steel pp 84 85 Le Conte David December 6 1998 Eclipse Quotations MrEclipse com Archived from the original on October 17 2020 Retrieved January 8 2011 Herodotus Book VII p 37 Archived from the original on 2008 08 19 Retrieved 2008 07 13 Chambers G F 1889 A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy Oxford Clarendon Press p 323 a b c d e Espenak Fred Solar Eclipses of Historical Interest NASA Eclipse web site NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on March 9 2008 Retrieved December 28 2011 Herodotus Book IX p 10 Archived from the original on 2020 07 26 Retrieved 2008 07 14 Schaefer Bradley E May 1994 Solar Eclipses That Changed the World Sky amp Telescope Vol 87 no 5 pp 36 39 Bibcode 1994S amp T 87 36S a b c d e Stephenson F Richard 1982 Historical Eclipses Scientific American Vol 247 no 4 pp 154 163 Bibcode 1982SciAm 247d 154S Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 3 Taipei Caves Books pp 411 413 OCLC 48999277 Humphreys C J Waddington W G 1983 Dating the Crucifixion Nature 306 5945 743 746 Bibcode 1983Natur 306 743H doi 10 1038 306743a0 S2CID 4360560 Kidger Mark 1999 The Star of Bethlehem An Astronomer s View Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 68 72 ISBN 978 0 691 05823 8 o Croinin Daibhi 13 May 2020 Reeling in the years why 664 AD was a terrible year in Ireland rte ie Archived from the original on 2021 01 08 Retrieved January 9 2021 Regis Morelon 1996 General survey of Arabic astronomy In Roshdi Rashed ed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol I Routledge p 15 Fiske John October 1 1997 Myths and Myth Makers Old Tales and Superstitions Interpreted by Comparative Mythology Project Gutenberg Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved February 12 2017 Espenak Fred July 11 2005 Eye Safety During Solar Eclipses NASA Eclipse web site NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on July 16 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Dobson Roger August 21 1999 UK hospitals assess eye damage after solar eclipse British Medical Journal 319 7208 469 doi 10 1136 bmj 319 7208 469 PMC 1116382 PMID 10454393 MacRobert Alan M 8 August 2006 How to Watch a Partial Solar Eclipse Safely Sky amp Telescope Retrieved August 4 2007 Chou B Ralph July 11 2005 Eye safety during solar eclipses NASA Eclipse web site NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Archived from the original on November 14 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 Littmann Mark Willcox Ken Espenak Fred 1999 Observing Solar Eclipses Safely MrEclipse com Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 Chou B Ralph January 20 2008 Eclipse Filters MrEclipse com Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved January 4 2012 a b Solar Viewing Safety Perkins Observatory Archived from the original on July 14 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 a b Harrington p 25 Harrington p 26 Harrington p 40 a b Littmann Mark Willcox Ken Espenak Fred 1999 The Experience of Totality MrEclipse com Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Kate Russo 1 August 2012 Total Addiction The Life of an Eclipse Chaser Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 642 30481 1 Archived from the original on 9 December 2019 Retrieved 24 August 2017 Kelly Pat 2017 07 06 Umbraphile Umbraphilia Umbraphiles and Umbraphiliacs Solar Eclipse with the Sol Alliance Solar Eclipse with the Sol Alliance Archived from the original on 2019 08 13 Retrieved 2017 08 24 How to View the 2017 Solar Eclipse Safely eclipse2017 nasa gov Archived from the original on 2017 08 24 Retrieved 2017 08 24 Wright Andy 2017 08 16 Chasing Totality A Look Into the World of Umbraphiles Atlas Obscura Archived from the original on 2020 12 14 Retrieved 2017 08 24 Kramer Bill Photographing a Total Solar Eclipse Eclipse chasers com Archived from the original on January 29 2009 Retrieved March 7 2010 Vorenkamp Todd April 2017 How to Photograph a Solar Eclipse B amp H Photo Video Archived from the original on July 1 2019 Retrieved August 19 2017 The science of eclipses ESA September 28 2004 Archived from the original on August 1 2012 Retrieved August 4 2007 Johnson Groh Mara 10 August 2017 Five Tips from NASA for Photographing the Total Solar Eclipse on Aug 21 NASA Archived from the original on 18 August 2020 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Dravins Dainis Flying Shadows Lund Observatory Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved January 15 2012 Dyson F W Eddington A S Davidson C R 1920 A Determination of the Deflection of Light by the Sun s Gravitational Field from Observations Made at the Solar eclipse of May 29 1919 Phil Trans Roy Soc A 220 571 81 291 333 Bibcode 1920RSPTA 220 291D doi 10 1098 rsta 1920 0009 Archived from the original on November 3 2020 Retrieved August 27 2019 Relativity and the 1919 eclipse ESA September 13 2004 Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved January 11 2011 Steel pp 114 120 Allais Maurice 1959 Should the Laws of Gravitation be Reconsidered Aero Space Engineering 9 46 55 Saxl Erwin J Allen Mildred 1971 1970 solar eclipse as seen by a torsion pendulum Physical Review D 3 4 823 825 Bibcode 1971PhRvD 3 823S doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 3 823 Wang Qian shen Yang Xin she Wu Chuan zhen Guo Hong gang Liu Hong chen Hua Chang chai 2000 Precise measurement of gravity variations during a total solar eclipse Physical Review D 62 4 041101 R arXiv 1003 4947 Bibcode 2000PhRvD 62d1101W doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 62 041101 S2CID 6846335 Yang X S Wang Q S 2002 Gravity anomaly during the Mohe total solar eclipse and new constraint on gravitational shielding parameter Astrophysics and Space Science 282 1 245 253 Bibcode 2002Ap amp SS 282 245Y doi 10 1023 A 1021119023985 S2CID 118497439 Meeus J Vitagliano A 2004 Simultaneous transits PDF J Br Astron Assoc 114 3 132 135 Bibcode 2004JBAA 114 132M Archived from the original PDF on July 10 2007 Grego Peter 2008 Venus and Mercury and How to Observe Them Springer p 3 ISBN 978 0387742854 ISS Venustransit astronomie info in German Archived from the original on 2020 07 28 Retrieved 2004 07 29 JSC Digital Image Collection NASA Johnson Space Center January 11 2006 Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved January 15 2012 Nemiroff R Bonnell J eds August 30 1999 Looking Back on an Eclipsed Earth Astronomy Picture of the Day NASA Retrieved January 15 2012 Solar Eclipse 2015 Impact Analysis Archived 2017 02 21 at the Wayback Machine pp 3 6 7 13 European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity 19 February 2015 Accessed 4 March 2015 Curve of potential power loss ing dk Archived from the original on 2020 07 28 Retrieved 2015 03 04 Gray S L Harrison R G 2012 Diagnosing eclipse induced wind changes Proceedings of the Royal Society 468 2143 1839 1850 Bibcode 2012RSPSA 468 1839G doi 10 1098 rspa 2012 0007 Archived from the original on 2015 03 04 Retrieved 2015 03 04 Young Alex How Eclipses Work NASA Archived from the original on 2017 09 18 Retrieved 21 September 2017 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 van Gent R H Solar and Lunar Eclipse Predictions from Antiquity to the Present A Catalogue of Eclipse Cycles Utrecht University Retrieved 6 October 2018 ReferencesMucke Hermann Meeus Jean 1992 Canon of Solar Eclipses 2003 to 2526 2 ed Vienna Astronomisches Buro Harrington Philip S 1997 Eclipse The What Where When Why and How Guide to Watching Solar and Lunar Eclipses New York John Wiley and Sons ISBN 0 471 12795 7 Steel Duncan 1999 Eclipse The celestial phenomenon which has changed the course of history London Headline ISBN 0 7472 7385 5 Mobberley Martin 2007 Total Solar Eclipses and How to Observe Them Astronomers Observing Guides New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 69827 4 Espenak Fred 2015 Thousand Year Canon of Solar Eclipses 1501 to 2500 Portal AZ Astropixels Publishing ISBN 978 1 941983 02 7 Espenak Fred 2016 21st Century Canon of Solar Eclipses Portal AZ Astropixels Publishing ISBN 978 1 941983 12 6 Fotheringham John Knight 1921 Historical eclipses being the Halley lecture delivered 17 May 1921 Oxford Clarendon Press External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solar eclipses Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Solar eclipses Listen to this article 2 parts 27 minutes source source source source These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated 3 May 2006 2006 05 03 and do not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles NASA Eclipse Web Site Eclipsewise Fred Espenak s new eclipse site Andrew Lowe s Eclipse Page with maps and circumstances for 5000 years of solar eclipses A Guide to Eclipse Activities for Educators Explaining eclipses in educational settings Detailed eclipse explanations and predictions Hermit Eclipse Eclipse Photography Prof Miroslav Druckmuller Animated maps of August 21 2017 solar eclipses Larry Koehn Five Millennium 1999 to 3000 Canon of Solar Eclipses Database Xavier M Jubier Animated explanation of the mechanics of a solar eclipse Archived 2013 05 25 at the Wayback Machine University of South Wales Eclipse Image Gallery Archived 2016 10 15 at the Wayback Machine The World at Night Ring of Fire Eclipse 2012 Photos Sun Eclipses of the Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Centered and aligned video recording of Total Solar Eclipse 20th March 2015 on YouTube Solar eclipse photographs taken from the Lick Observatory from the Lick Observatory Records Digital Archive UC Santa Cruz Library s Digital Collections Archived 2020 06 05 at the Wayback Machine Video with Total Solar Eclipse March 09 2016 From the Beginning to the Total Phase on YouTube Total Solar Eclipse Shadow on Earth March 09 2016 CIMSSSatelite List of all solar eclipses National Geographic Solar Eclipse 101 video Archived 2018 08 04 at the Wayback Machine Wikiversity has a solar eclipse lab that students can do on any sunny day Portals Astronomy Stars Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solar eclipse amp oldid 1151237034, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.