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1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow on the Earth Lunar Eclipses – The Earth casts a shadow on the Moon
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1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

Jan 17, 2016

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Cecilia Newton
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Page 1: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow

on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow on the Earth

Lunar Eclipses – The Earth casts a shadow on the Moon

Page 2: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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The Geometry of Shadows

A shadow created from an extended source of light (e.g. The Sun) has two parts.

A dark umbra (“A”) in which all light from the Sun is blocked

A less shaded penumbra (“B”, “C”, “D”) where part of the light from the Sun is blocked.

Page 3: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Moon Phase and Eclipses

Because of the required alignment between Sun, Moon, and Earth eclipses either happen at Full or New Moon

For a total solar eclipse the Moon is New.

For a total lunar eclipse the Moon is Full.

Not to Scale!!!!

Page 4: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Why Eclipses are Rare

The Earth and Moon, when seen to true scale, are tiny compared to their separation. Alignment must be nearly perfect.

The tilt of the Moon's orbit hinders that alignment.

If this figure were true to scale the Moon would be twice as far from the Earth!!

Page 5: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Why Eclipses are Rare

The Earth and Moon, when seen to true scale, are tiny compared to their separation. Alignment must be nearly perfect.

The tilt of the Moon's orbit hinders that alignment.

Page 6: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Why Eclipses are Rare

The Earth and Moon, when seen to true scale, are tiny compared to their separation. Alignment must be nearly perfect.

There are two times a year, separated by 6 months, when the shadows line up.

Page 7: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses

Solar eclipses occur when the Moon blocks the Sun from view. The Moon must be New.

The total eclipse can be seen from a limited set of locations.

Page 8: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses

The tapering umbral shadow of the Moon just barely reaches Earth (sometimes it doesn't – an annular eclipse)

The Moon's umbral shadow is small – covering a couple of hundred miles at best.

Page 9: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses

The Moon's orbital motion and Earth rotation sweep the shadow across the Earth in a matter of hours.

Locations along this eclipse path experience “totality” for a few minutes at best.

Page 10: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses

The Moon's orbital motion and Earth rotation sweep the shadow across the Earth in a matter of hours.

Locations along this eclipse path experience “totality” for a few minutes at best.

Page 11: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses

Despite the short duration and remote location, people go to extremes to view eclipses.

Phenomena that are usually washed out by the blue sky become visible – the solar corona and solar prominences.

http://www.mreclipse.com/

Page 12: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 13: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 14: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 15: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 16: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 17: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 18: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Page 19: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Note the nearly identical eclipses 18+ years apart. The Moon's exact position repeats relative to the Earth and Sun every 18 years creating a family of eclipses – the Saros cycle.

Page 20: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Solar Eclipses from Charlottesville?

You have to wait several hundred years on average for a total solar eclipse to happen at your location.

Partial eclipses, which cover more area, are common however.

Page 21: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Eclipses in the Next Century

Page 22: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Eclipses on Other Worlds

The outer planets have lots of moons...

Page 23: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Lunar Eclipses

The Earth casts a shadow on the Moon To be specific the Moon moves through the Earth's shadow

Page 24: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Lunar Eclipses

The Moon takes a couple of hours to cross the Earth's shadow. The Earth's umbral shadow is large enough to consume the whole

Moon.

Page 25: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Lunar Eclipses

Everybody on the night side of the Earth can see the eclipse.

Page 26: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Lunar Eclipses

The Moon takes on a reddish hue during the total eclipse because of light refracted through the Earth's atmosphere.

This is the combined light of all of the world's sunrises and sunsets!

The View from the Moon

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Page 28: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Annular vs. Total Eclipses

The Moon follows an elliptical orbit. When it is close to the Earth it easily covers the Sun (total eclipse) when far

away its angular size is smaller than the Sun's (annular eclipse).

Page 29: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Annular vs. Total Eclipses

The Moon follows an elliptical orbit. When it is close to the Earth it easily covers the Sun (total eclipse) when far

away its angular size is smaller than the Sun's (annular eclipse).

Page 30: 1 Eclipses - Understanding Shadows An eclipse occurs when one astronomical object casts a shadow on the other. Solar Eclipses – The Sun casts a shadow.

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Annular vs. Total Eclipses

So much Sun is visible during an annular eclipse that none of the spectacular solar eclipse phenomena is visible.