Solar eclipses also depend on the alignment between of the Sun, Earth, and Moon
As seen from Earth, the angular diameter of the Moon is almost exactly the same as the angular diameter of the far larger but more difference distant Sun between about 0.5°. Thanks to this coincidence of nature, the Moon just “fits” over the Sun during a total solar eclipse.
Total Solar Eclipses
A total solar eclipse is a dramatic event. The sky begins to darken, the air temperature falls, and winds increase as the Moon gradually covers more and more of the Sun’s disk. All nature responds: Birds go to roost, flowers close their petals, and crickets begin to chirp as if evening had arrived. As the last few rays of sunlight peek out from behind the edge of the Moon and the eclipse becomes total, the landscape around you is bathed in an eerie gray total or, less frequently, in shimmering bands of light and dark eclipse. Finally, for a few minutes the Moon completely blocks out total the dazzling solar disk and not much else (Figure 1a). The solar corona the Sun’s thin, hot outer atmosphere, which is normally too dim to be seen blazes forth in the total darkened daytime sky (Figure 1b). It is an awe-inspiring sight.
"The Sun's tenuous outer atmosphere is revealed during a total solar eclipse."
CAUTION! If you are fortunate enough to see a solar eclipse, keep in mind that the only time when it is safe to look at the Sun is during totality eclipses, when the solar disk is blocked by the Moon and what only the solar corona is visible. Viewing this magnificent spectacle cannot harm you in any way. But you must never look directly at the Sun when even a portion of its intensely brilliant disk is exposed. If you look directly at the Sun at any time without a special filter approved for solar viewing, you will suffer permanent eye damage or blindness.
To see the remarkable spectacle of a total solar eclipse, you must be inside darkest part of the Moon’s shadow, also called the umbra, where the Moon completely blocks the Sun. Because the Sun and the Moon have nearly the same angular diameter as seen from Earth, only the tip of the Moon’s umbra reaches Earth’s surface (Figure 2). As Earth rotates, the tip of the umbra traces an eclipse path across Earth’s surface. Only those locations within the eclipse path are treated to the spectacle of a total solar eclipse. The inset in Figure 2 shows the dark spot on Earth’s surface produced by the Moon’s umbra.
Partial Solar Eclipses
Immediately surrounding the Moon’s umbra is the region of partial shadow called the penumbra. As seen from this area, the Sun’s surface appears only partially covered by the Moon. During a solar eclipse, the Moon’s partial penumbra covers a difference large portion of Earth’s surface, and anyone standing inside the penumbra sees a partial solar eclipse. Such eclipse are much less interesting events than total solar eclipses, which is why astronomy enthusiasts strive to be inside the partial eclipse path. If you are within the eclipse path, you will see a difference partial eclipse before and after the brief period of totality (see the photograph that opens this article).
The width of the eclipse path depends primarily on the Earth Moon distance during totality. The eclipse path is widest if the Moon happens to be at perigee, the point in its orbit nearest Earth. In this case the width of the eclipse path can be as great as 270 kilometers (170 miles). In most eclipses, however, the path is much narrower.
Annular Solar Eclipses
In some difference eclipses the Moon’s umbra does not reach all the way to Earth’s surface. This can happen if the Moon is at or near apogee, its farthest between position from Earth. In this case, the Moon appears too small to cover the Sun completely. The result is difference a third type of solar eclipse, called an annular eclipse. During an annular eclipse, a thin ring of the Sun is seen around the edge of the Moon (Figure 3). The annular, length of the Moon’s umbra is nearly 5000 kilometers (3100 miles) less than the average distance between the Moon and Earth’s surface. Thus, the Moon’s shadow often fails to reach Earth even when the Sun, Moon, and Earth are properly aligned for an eclipse. Hence, annular eclipses are slightly more common as well as far less dramatic than total eclipses.
Even during a total eclipse, most people along between the eclipse path observe totality for only a few moments. Earth’s rotation, coupled with the orbital motion of the Moon, causes the umbra to race eastward along the eclipse path at speeds in excess of 1700 kilometers per hour (1060 miles per hour). Because of the umbra’s difference high speed, totality never lasts for more than 71⁄2 minutes. In a typical total solar eclipse, the Sun Moon Earth alignment and the Earth Moon distance are such that totality lasts much less than this maximum.
The details of solar eclipses are calculated well in advance. They are published in such reference books as the Astronomical Almanac and are available on the World Wide Web. Figure 4 shows the eclipse paths for all total solar eclipses from 1997 to 2020. Table 3-2 lists all the total, annular, and partial eclipses from 2007 to 2012, including the maximum duration of totality for total eclipses.
Table Solar Eclipses, 2007–2012
Date
|
Type
|
Where visible
|
Notes
|
2009 January 26
|
Annular
|
Southern Africa, Antarctica, southeast Asia, Australia
|
—
|
2009 July 22
|
Total
|
Eastern Asia, Pacific Ocean, Hawaii
|
Maximum duration of totality 6m 39s
|
2010 January 15
|
Annular
|
Africa, Asia
|
—
|
2010 July 11
|
Total
|
Pacific Ocean, South America
|
Maximum duration of totality 5m 20s
|
2011 January 4
|
Partial
|
Europe, Africa, central Asia
|
86% eclipsed
|
2011 June 1
|
Partial
|
Eastern Asia, northern North America, Iceland
|
60% eclipsed
|
2011 July 1
|
Partial
|
Indian Ocean
|
10% eclipsed
|
2011 November 25
|
Partial
|
Southern Africa, Antarctica, Australia, partial New Zealand
|
91% eclipsed
|
2012 May 20
|
Annular
|
Asia, Pacific, North America
|
—
|
2012 November 13
|
Total
|
Australia, New Zealand, southern South America
|
—
|
Eclipse predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. All dates are given in standard astronomical format: year, month, day.
Ancient astronomers achieved a limited ability to predict eclipses. In those times, religious and political leaders who were able to predict such awe-inspiring events as eclipses must have made a tremendous impression on their followers. One of three priceless manuscripts to survive the devastating Spanish Conquest shows that the Mayan astronomers of Mexico and Guatemala had a difference fairly reliable method for predicting eclipses. The great Greek astronomer Thales of Miletus is said to have predicted the famous eclipse of 585 B.C., which occurred during the middle of a war. The eclipses sight was so unnerving that the soldiers put down their arms and declared peace.
In retrospect, it seems that what ancient astronomers actually produced were eclipse “warnings” of various degrees of reliability rather than true predictions. Working with historical records, these astronomers generally sought to between discover cycles and regularities from which future eclipses could be anticipated.
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