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Winter Soltice - Solar Eclipse
Can anyone confirm what I am hearing about the 21 December Winter Soltice cum Solar Eclipse.
I have been told this is a unique event and has not happened on this date, in this manner is 632 years!
Is this correct?
If not, then when did this combination actually last happen?
Many thanks :-)
I have been told this is a unique event and has not happened on this date, in this manner is 632 years!
Is this correct?
If not, then when did this combination actually last happen?
Many thanks :-)
Answers
For the first time since 1378, a total lunar eclipse of a full moon falls on the winter solstice, so what you hear is correct.
18:55 Mon 20th Dec 2010
The eclipse is due to begin at 5.28am Tuesday morning, as the moon enters the lightest part of Earth's shadow, known as the penumbra. In this early phase of the eclipse, the moon will appear yellowish in the pre-dawn sky.
A more significant dimming begins as the moon enters into the darker part of Earth's shadow at 6.32am and becomes completely eclipsed at 7.40am.
Fingers crossed for a combination of clear skies and insomnia, lol
A more significant dimming begins as the moon enters into the darker part of Earth's shadow at 6.32am and becomes completely eclipsed at 7.40am.
Fingers crossed for a combination of clear skies and insomnia, lol
Listening to the reports on breakfast TV this morning – an astronomer stated that around 10 lunar eclipses occur each decade (about one a year). Assuming that the day of the year on which lunar eclipses occur to be random – then for any specified day of the year, a lunar eclipse will occur on that day (on average) once in every 365 years.
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