Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Longest Total Lunar Eclipse in 11 Years Occurs Wednesday


A total lunar eclipse is seen as the full moon is shadowed by the Earth on the arrival of the winter solstice, Tuesday, December 21, 2010 in Arlington, VA. From beginning to end, the eclipse lasted about three hours and twenty-eight minutes.
CREDIT: NASA/Bill Ingalls
The longest total lunar eclipse since July 2000 will occur on Wednesday (June 15), with skywatchers in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Australia in prime position to witness the moon treat.

The event is the first lunar eclipse of 2011 and one of two total lunar eclipses this year. The eclipse, which will occur during June's full moon, will begin at 1:24 p.m. EDT (1724 GMT) and last until 7 p.m. EDT (2300 GMT), but it will not be visible from North America.

For observers in regions where it will be visible, the eclipse could offer an amazing sight: the period of totality will be 100 minutes. In the last 100 years, only three other eclipses have rivaled the duration of totality of this eclipse, according to SPACE.com's skywatching columnist Joe. Rao. The last lunar eclipse of similar length occured on July 16, 2000 and lasted 107 minutes.

"The entire event will be seen from the eastern half of Africa, the Middle East, central Asia and western Australia," stated the NASA Eclipse Website of the June 15 event. "Observers throughout Europe will miss the early stages of the eclipse because they occur before moonrise."



Total eclipse of the moon
Total lunar eclipses occur when the Earth passes directly between the sun and the moon, casting a deep shadow through which the moon then travels through.

"From the Earth, the moon will appear to darken and turn a deep red before eventually returning to normal," explained NASA officials at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in an advisory. "When light from the sun goes by the side of the Earth, it passes through a long and thick layer of Earth's atmosphere. Shorter wavelengths of sunlight, like blue, are scattered by the atmosphere, so by the time the light has finished its trip to the moon, more of the longer wavelengths, like red, are left over. On the Earth, the same thing happens at sunset as the ground you stand on gradually passes into night."

Unlike their solar counterparts, lunar eclipses are safe to view without any special protective glasses or equipment.

Countries in prime viewing position
According to NASA's eclipse website, Wednesday's total lunar eclipse will be visible during its peak to skywatchers throughout Europe, with the exception of Scotland and northern Scandinavia.

In eastern South America, Western Europe and the west coast of Africa, the eclipse will occur Wednesday evening, according to Rao. Skywatchers in eastern Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina have a chance to see the lunar eclipse during its total stage, NASA officials said.

But for some countries, the event will be visible in the wee hours of Thursday (June 16) because the eclipse's region of visibility crosses the International Date Line. The early Thursday viewing times apply to observers in central Siberia, eastern Mongolia, northeast China, and most of Japan, Korea, New Guinea, eastern Australia and New Zealand, Rao explained.

"Eastern Asia, eastern Australia, and New Zealand will miss the last stages of eclipse because they occur after moonset," the NASA Eclipse Website advisory stated.

Wednesday's lunar eclipse is part of a rare three-eclipse series of events occurring in June and early July. It follows the June 1 partial solar eclipse and comes before another partial solar eclipse, which will occur on July 1 but only be visible from a remote region near Antarctica.

The second lunar eclipse of 2011 will occur on Dec. 10 and will also be a total lunar eclipse. That even should be visible from the western United States and Canada.
Article by:: SPACE.com Staff
Source: Space.com

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Partial Solar Eclipse's Midnight Twist: Starts Thursday, Ends Wednesday


Shortly before midnight on June 1 in Tromsø, Norway, the partially eclipsed sun will hang just above the northern horizon.
CREDIT: Starry Night Software
Wednesday brings a partial solar eclipse to parts of Asia and North America, but it comes with an odd twist: At one point, the eclipse will be occurring at "midnight" between the two days this week.

During the eclipse, the outer shadow of the moon (called the penumbra) will first fall on northeast Asia as the eclipse begins, and then work its way east across the International Date Line. Because of that timing, this eclipse will have the quirky circumstance of beginning on the morning of Thursday (June 2) and ending on the evening of Wednesday (June 1).

For this partial solar eclipse, the axis of the moon's shadow, the dark cone we call the umbra, actually never hits the Earth’s surface, passing about 843 miles (1,358 kilometers) above Cheshskaya Bay and the Bolshezemelskaya Tundra of far northwestern Russia. There, the sun will be seen to dip right to the northern horizon — at the "midnight" point of its 24-hour Arctic day — before climbing again.

During the few minutes in which the eclipse will reach its peak, with the top three-fifths of the sun bitten away by the moon, the sun will take on the appearance of a huge boat sailing out over the icy Barents Sea.

Greenland and Iceland are also within the eclipse zone, the latter getting a view just before the sun begins to set in their late evening.

Solar eclipses occur when the moon passes in front of the sun as seen from the Earth's surface. Total solar eclipses occur when the moon appears to completely block the sun, but occasionally the moon's only in front of a portion of the sun. These events can create partial and so-called annular eclipses.

While total solar eclipses, which can be viewed only from the narrow path of the moon's shadow on the Earth, partial solar eclipses can be seen across much wider geographical areas.

A NASA skywatching table available here details the local eclipse viewing times for different locations around the world. WARNING: NEVER stare directly at the sun with your naked eye or through binoculars or a telescope without proper light filters. Serious eye damage can result.


ok This NASA graphic shows the track of the June 1-2 partial solar eclipse, which will begin on June 2 and end on June 1 due to a fluke of its path across the International Date Line.
CREDIT: NASA

Alaska and Canada get eclipse views
For the North Americans, we might call this the "Alcan Eclipse" since it will be visible primarily from Alaska and northern Canada.

Indeed, the eclipse will be available to the northern two-thirds of Alaska (an early afternoon event), as well as northern and eastern portions of Canada, who will see the eclipse during the course of the afternoon, as the sun slowly descends toward the west-northwest horizon. The penumbral shadow finally passes over the Earth’s surface and cross over the open waters of the Atlantic to the east of Newfoundland, as the sun is passing out of sight.

Skywatchers in Alaska who will see a very small, but noticeable, scallop taken out of the upper limb of the sun around 1 p.m. Alaska Daylight Time include those in Fairbanks, Nome and Barrow.

In Canada, careful viewers in the Maritime Provinces might be able to detect a tiny "dent" in the sun’s upper right rim. Charlottetown, P.E.I., Moncton, New Brunswick, Glace Bay, Nova Scotia and St. John’s, Newfoundland, are all just within the visibility zone of this upcoming eclipse.

One might wonder if any part of the contiguous (48) states will be able to see this eclipse and the answer is "yes," but just barely.

In Madawaska, located at the very top of the state of Maine, the dark moon will encroach upon the sun's upper limb at 6:39 p.m. EDT and move off of it just 10 minutes later. At maximum, the moon will obscure only 0.003 percent of the sun.

To call this an "eclipse" for Maine skywatchers is being charitable, to say the least!

This NASA table lists the best viewing times for the partial solar eclipse on June 1-2, 2011, including major cities and the amount of eclipse skywatchers can expect to see by location.
CREDIT: NASA
Be very careful!
Once again it needs repeating: looking at the sun without proper eye protection is dangerous. Looking at the sun is harmful to your eyes at anytime, partial eclipse or no.

Many people are under the mistaken impression that when a solar eclipse is in progress there is something especially insidious about the sun's light. But the true danger that an eclipse poses is simply that it may induce people to stare at the sun, something they wouldn't normally do.

The result can be "eclipse blindness," a serious eye injury that has been recognized at least since the early 1900s. About half of the reported victims of eclipse blindness recover their precious quality of eyesight after a few days or weeks. The other half carries a permanent blurry or blind spot at the center of their vision for the rest of their lives.

By far, the safest way to view a solar eclipse is to construct a pinhole camera.

A pinhole or small opening is used to form an image of the sun on a screen placed about three feet behind the opening. Binoculars or a small telescope mounted on a tripod can also be used to project a magnified image of the sun onto a white card. Just be sure not to look through the binoculars or telescope when they are pointed toward the sun!

A variation on the pinhole theme is the pinhole mirror.

Cover a pocket-mirror with a piece of paper that has a one-quarter-inch hole punched in it. Open a sun-facing window and place the covered mirror on the sunlit sill so it reflects a disk of light onto the far wall inside. The disk of light is an image of the sun's face.

The farther away from the wall the better; the image will be only one inch across for every 9 feet from the mirror. Modeling clay works well to hold the mirror in place. Experiment with different-size holes in the paper. Again, a large hole makes the image bright, but fuzzy, and a small one makes it dim but sharp.

Darken the room as much as possible. Be sure to try this out beforehand to make sure the mirror's optical quality is good enough to project a clean, round image. Of course, don’t let anyone look at the sun in the mirror.

Unacceptable filters include sunglasses, color film negatives, black-and-white film that contains no silver, photographic neutral-density filters and polarizing filters. Although these materials have very low visible-light transmittance levels, they transmit an unacceptably high level of near-infrared radiation that can cause a thermal retinal burn.

The fact that the sun appears dim, or that you feel no discomfort when looking at the sun through the filter, is no guarantee that your eyes are safe.
Article by: Joe Rao, SPACE.com Skywatching Columnist
Source: Space.com