1.12 Eclipse Seasons
Pre-Lecture Reading 1.12
-
•Astronomy Today, 8th Edition (Chaisson & McMillan)
-
•Astronomy Today, 7th Edition (Chaisson & McMillan)
-
•Astronomy Today, 6th Edition (Chaisson & McMillan)
Video Lecture
-
•Eclipse Seasons (13:09)
Supplementary Notes
Eclipse Conditions
-
•See Eclipse Conditions.
Figure 1
-
•The Earth-Moon plane is tilted with respect to the Sun-Earth plane by ≈5°.
-
•Consequently, eclipses do not occur every new and full moon.
-
-
•The intersection of the Earth-Moon plane and the Sun-Earth plane is called the line of nodes.
-
•Eclipses occur when both:
-
•1. The line of nodes points toward the sun.
-
•This is called an eclipse season. It is a 38-day period of time when you can, but do not necessarily, have eclipses.
-
•2 eclipse seasons = 1 eclipse year
-
-
•2. The moon is on the line of nodes.
-
Regression of the Line of Nodes
-
•The Earth is nearly spherical and consequently precesses slowly compared to its rotation rate: 26,000 years vs. 1 day.
-
•The Earth-Moon system is not spherical and consequently precesses quickly compared to its "rotation" rate: 18.6 years vs. 1 month.
-
•Since the precession is in the opposite direction, we call it regression, or regression of the line of nodes.
-
•Since the line of nodes regresses, it points to the sun earlier.
-
•Consequently, the eclipse year is shorter than the tropical year.
-
•1 eclipse year ≈ 346 days
-
Eclipse Statistics
-
•Eclipse seasons: Between 2 and 3 per calendar year.
-
•Eclipses (solar + lunar): Between 4 and 7 per calendar year.
-
•Eclipses (solar + non-penumbral lunar): Between 2 and 7 per calendar year.
-
•Solar eclipses (total + partial): Between 2 and 5 per calendar year.
-
•Total solar eclipses: Between 0 and 2 per calendar year.
-
•Lunar eclipses (total + partial + penumbral): Between 2 and 5 per calendar year.
-
•Non-penumbral lunar eclipses (total + partial): Between 0 and 3 per calendar year.
-
•Total lunar eclipses: Between 0 and 3 per calendar year.
Exercises
-
•Experiment with UNL's Moon Inclination.
-
•View UNL's Eclipse Table.