ECLIPSE

ēklĭpsˈ, ĭ– [Gr.,=failing], in astronomy, partial or total obscuring of one celestial body by the shadow of another. Best known are the lunar eclipses, which occur when the earth blocks the sun's light from the moon, and solar eclipses, occurring when the moon blocks the sun's light from a small portion of the earth. Occasionally a double or binary star system is aligned so that one star eclipses the other as seen from the earth; these stars are known as eclipsing binaries. Also important to science have been the eclipses of Jupiter's satellites; in 1675 the Danish astronomer Ole Roemer used these eclipses to calculate the speed of light. Observations of starlight passing near the sun during the 1919 solar eclipse were of particular value in validating Einstein's general theory of relativity.

Lunar Eclipses

Since the earth and moon shine only by the reflected light of the sun, each casts a shadow into space in the direction away from the sun. The shadow consists of a cone-shaped area of darkness called the umbra, where all light from the sun is cut off, and a larger area of partial darkness called the penumbra, which surrounds the umbra and receives light from a part of the sun's disk. Lunar eclipses can occur only when the moon is in its full phase, i.e., when the earth is between the sun and the moon. These eclipses may be total or partial, depending on whether the moon passes completely into the umbra of the earth's shadow or remains partly in the penumbra. Since the moon cuts the umbra close to the base, it can experience long periods of total eclipse ranging up to 1 hr, 42 min. A partial eclipse (when it passes through the penumbra) can last more than 2 hr, and the entire lunar eclipse may continue for as long as 4 hr. Some light is refracted, or bent, by the earth's atmosphere into the umbra, so that the moon at totality, instead of appearing black, ranges from a dull gray to a coppery color, depending on the amount of dust in the earth's atmosphere.

Solar Eclipses

A total solar eclipse can occur only when the moon is in its new phase. At this time the moon is between the sun and the earth and cannot be seen until it moves across the sun's disk. At the onset of totality, parts of the sun may be seen shining brightly between the high points of the moon's irregular edge, a phenomenon known as Baily's beads; the disk of the moon appears black and is surrounded by the sun's corona, out of which shoot immense, flamelike spurts called prominences. The sky darkens to twilight, the brightest stars become visible, and there is a noticeable drop in temperature. Baily's beads are seen again as the sun reappears and the sky grows lighter.

At apogee (when the moon is at its farthest point from the earth) the umbra of its shadow is too short to reach the earth's surface, causing the apparent diameter of the sun's disk to be larger than that of the moon. Where the moon would otherwise block the sun entirely, now the sun is seen as a bright ring completely surrounding the moon's disk; this eclipse is known as an annular, or ring, eclipse. The longest possible duration of totality for a solar eclipse is 7 min, 40 sec at or near the equator when the sun is directly overhead; the duration decreases with increasing latitude. The eclipse of June 20, 1955, lasted 7 min, 8 sec, which was the longest duration of totality in 1,238 years; an eclipse almost as long occurred on July 11, 1991.

Frequency and Prediction of Eclipses

If the plane of the moon's orbit about the earth coincided with that of the earth about the sun, a solar eclipse would be observed each month when the moon is new and a lunar eclipse when the moon is full. However, the moon's orbital plane is tilted at an angle of about 5°10′ to the earth's orbital plane, making eclipses possible only when the three bodies are aligned (at new or full moon) and when the moon is crossing the earth's orbital plane (at a point called the node). Within a given year, a maximum of seven eclipses can occur, either four solar and three lunar or five solar and two lunar. Despite the fact that there are more solar than lunar eclipses each year, over time many more lunar eclipses are seen at any single location on earth than solar eclipses. This occurs because a lunar eclipse can be seen from the entire half of the earth facing the moon at that time, while a solar eclipse is visible only along a narrow path on the earth's surface.

From their observations of eclipses the Chaldaeans (fl. 1000 b.c.–540 b.c.) discovered that similar eclipses of the sun recur in cycles of 18 years, 11 1 / 3 days; this cycle, called the saros, is an interval in which the sun, earth, and moon return to nearly identical relative positions. Since the orbits of the earth and moon are quite accurately known, eclipses can be predicted far in advance, both in time and location. Similar calculations can determine the time and place of past eclipses; this information is useful for dating historical events that are known to have occurred at the same time as an eclipse.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Eclipse  - 14929 results

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ECLIPSE OF FREEDOM ECLIPSE 0F FREEDOM The World of Oppression BRIJ MOHAN PRAEGER Westport...Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mohan, Brij. Eclipse of freedom : the world of oppression / Brij Mohan. p. cm Includes...
...THE THEORY MESS deconstruction in eclipse COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS...The theory mess : deconstruction in eclipse / Herman Rapaport. p. cm. Includes bibliographical...when deconstruction gets critiqued or eclipsed because of wild analyses that cannot...
...Legacy Rousseaus Legacy Emergence and Eclipse of the Writer in France DENNIS PORTER...1933- Rousseaus legacy: emergence and eclipse of the writer in France / Dennis Porter...countries. My interest in the emergence and eclipse of a certain idea of "the writer" goes...
...SLAVERY and the AMERICAN WEST The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of...1948- Slavery and the American West: the eclipse of manifest destiny and the coming of...188 8 The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Disruption...
THE ECLIPSE OF RUSSIA BY E. J. DILLON Author of "Ourselves and Germany...TREATY 393 INDEX 415 THE ECLIPSE OF RUSSIA THE ECLIPSE OF RUSSIA CHAPTER I THE RUSSIAN ENIGMA THE misfortunes...
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Malaysian Eclipse: Economic Crisis and Recovery by Gerald Epstein ********** Malaysian Eclipse: Economic Crisis and Recovery. Edited...this fine collection of essays, Malaysian Eclipse, edited by Jomo K.S., an economist from...
Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of...Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of...Morrisons Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of...
Malaysian Eclipse: Economic Crisis and Recovery. by Kiyokatsu Nishiguchi MALAYSIAN ECLIPSE: Economic Crisis and Recovery. Edited by K. S. Jomo. London (U.K.), New York: Zed Books. 2001. xlii, 321pp. (Tables, graphs, charts.) US$75...
A Long Eclipse: The Liberal Protestant Establishment and the Canadian University, 1920-1970. by Catherine Carstairs Gidney, Catherine. A Long Eclipse: The Liberal Protestant Establishment and the Canadian University, 1920-1970...
Michael A. Morrison. Slavery and the American West: the Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War by Robert H. Gudmestad Chapel Hill London: University of North...
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magazine articles on: Eclipse  - 796 results

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CCIs Eclipse 7020. by Fred S. Knight There...to integrated backbone networks. CCIs Eclipse 7020, according to company senior vice...on the LAN." The Basic Package The Eclipse 7020 consists of PC-based network interface...
At another eclipse, a star was born by Anne Boston...Einstein was even more so. The solar eclipse on 11 August should reveal stars shining...theory of relativity, and it was the solar eclipse of 1919 that tested the theory and found...
...Get the Best View of the Total Solar Eclipse, Geographical Travels to This Largely...Africas fourth largest country: a total eclipse of the sun. After all, he has seen plenty of them already--Libya is good eclipse-viewing territory. However, his upbeat...
Eclipse Fever! on Wednesday 4 December, a Total Eclipse of the Sun Will Be Seen over Most of Southern Africa. Millions...December to see what is going to be the most amazing total eclipse of the sun traversing the Southern Hemisphere and visible...
Is Nothing Sacred? the Eclipse of the Holy in Contemporary Christianity...dismiss the present situation with the eclipse of the holy as a mere pendulum swing...fogeyism as I survey the causes for the eclipse of the sacred--can it be that the seeming...
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Female Times: Health Watch: Total Eclipse: The Blinding Truth! by Gemma...damaging their eyes while watching the solar eclipse of the sun on August 11, according to...retinal damage. It is the first total eclipse of the sun over the United Kingdom since...
Eclipse over the Ellipse by Lauren Keeport A rare celestial event, a solar eclipse, will reach its peak in the Washington area around 1:15...Museum will set up equipment for the public to view the eclipse from the south side of the building, which faces Independence...
Eclipse 2006; Follow the Sun: Put on Your Eye Shades -- and Get...Moon will slide between the Sun and the Earth and a solar eclipse will plunge swathes of the globe into eerie daytime darkness...Libya and Egypt before heading over the Mediterranean. The eclipse will make landfall for a second time in Turkeys Anatolia...
The Eclipse: What Is an Eclipse?; Expert Barrie W Jones of the Open Universitys Astronomy Group...Phenomenon. by Barrie W Jones The first total solar eclipse since 1927 will cross the UK mainland on August 11. But what is...
Solar Eclipse Will Be like Nothing We Have Ever Seen...centre of the centurys last total solar eclipse, the experience will be nothing short...fear of impending doom. For us, the eclipse is an early treat in a millennium universe...
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encyclopedia articles on: Eclipse  - 55 results

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ECLIPSE eklips , i Gr.,=failing, in astronomy, partial or total obscuring of one celestial body by the shadow of another. Best known are the lunar eclipses, which occur when the earth blocks the suns light from the moon, and solar eclipses, occurring when the moon blocks the suns light from a small portion of the earth...
SAROS see eclipse . ____________________ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright 2007, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.
UMBRA see eclipse ; sunspots . ____________________ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright 2007, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.
PENUMBRA pinum br : see eclipse ; sunspots . ____________________ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright 2007, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.
BAILYS BEADS see eclipse . ____________________ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright 2007, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.
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