Eclipse
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
An eclipse is an astronomical event when one astronomical object moves into the shadow of another, or when another object passes between it and the viewer. This special alignment is called a syzygy. Eclipses can happen in different ways, such as one object being completely hidden (occultation) or only partly hidden (transit).
We most often hear about two kinds of eclipses: solar eclipses and lunar eclipses. In a solar eclipse, the Moon comes between the Sun and the Earth, and the Moon's shadow falls on the Earth. In a lunar eclipse, the Moon moves into the Earth's shadow. But eclipses can happen in other places too, like when a planet moves into the shadow of one of its moons, or when a moon passes into the shadow of its planet.
Solar and lunar eclipses only happen during special times called "eclipse seasons," which happen twice each year. This is when the Earth's orbit around the Sun crosses the Moon's orbit around the Earth. Because the Moon's orbit is tilted, eclipses do not happen every month. If the orbits were perfectly lined up, we would see eclipses much more often. Total solar eclipses are rare and can be many years apart for any one place on Earth.
Etymology
The word "eclipse" comes from an ancient Greek word, ἔκλειψις (ékleipsis), meaning 'the darkening of a heavenly body'. This word comes from a verb meaning 'to darken' or 'to cease to exist'. It shows how people in ancient times described the event when the Sun or Moon seems to disappear for a while.
Umbra, penumbra and antumbra
Main article: Umbra, penumbra and antumbra
An eclipse happens when one space object moves into the shadow of another object. This creates a shadow area that can be seen from certain places on Earth or in space.
During an eclipse, the shadow has three parts. The umbra is where the object completely blocks the light. The antumbra is where the object is in front of the light but is too small to block it fully. The penumbra is where the object only partly blocks the light. If you are in the umbra, you see a total eclipse. If you are in the antumbra, you see an annular eclipse. If you are in the penumbra, you see a partial eclipse.
Eclipse cycles
An eclipse cycle is a pattern of when eclipses happen again. One famous example is the saros. This makes similar solar or lunar eclipses happen about every 18 years. Because the time is not exactly the same each time, you can see each eclipse from different parts of the world. The way the Earth and Moon move makes these patterns happen in a way we can predict for many years.
Earth–Moon system
An eclipse happens when the Sun, Earth, and Moon line up. The Moon's path around the Earth is tilted, so eclipses only happen when the Moon is near the points where these paths cross. This happens twice a year during a time called eclipse season. During this time, there can be between four to seven eclipses in a year.
A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon moves in front of the Sun as seen from Earth. This can result in a total solar eclipse, where the Moon completely covers the Sun, or an annular eclipse, where the Moon only partially covers the Sun leaving a ring of sunlight visible. These eclipses are brief and can only be seen in totality along a narrow path on Earth.
A lunar eclipse happens when the Moon moves into Earth's shadow. This can only occur during a full moon and can be seen from a large area of Earth. Lunar eclipses last longer than solar eclipses and can be total, partial, or penumbral, where the Moon only skims Earth's shadow. Even during a total lunar eclipse, the Moon often appears reddish, which is why it is sometimes called a "Blood Moon."
Other planets and dwarf planets
Gas giants
See also: Solar eclipses on Jupiter, Solar eclipses on Saturn, Solar eclipses on Uranus, and Solar eclipses on Neptune
The large planets in our solar system, called gas giants, often have eclipses because they have many moons. Jupiter especially shows beautiful eclipses, where its big moons move in front of it and cast shadows. These shadows can be seen moving across Jupiter's clouds.
Scientists used these eclipses to learn how fast light travels. By watching when eclipses happened a little late, they figured out the time it takes for light to reach us from far away.
Mars
Main article: Transit of Phobos from Mars
On Mars, the moons are too small to cover the Sun completely, so we only see parts of the Sun being covered. However, Mars's moons often pass in front of each other, creating their own eclipses. These have been captured in pictures from Mars itself.
Pluto
Main article: Solar eclipses on Pluto
Pluto and its large moon Charon often eclipse each other. This happened regularly between 1985 and 1990, helping scientists learn more about both of them.
Mercury and Venus
Eclipses are not possible on Mercury and Venus because they have no moons. But we can see them pass in front of the Sun from Earth. Transits of Venus are rare, happening in pairs every eight years, but these pairs occur less than once every hundred years. The next pair will be in the year 2117. Transits of Mercury happen more often, about thirteen times every hundred years.
Eclipsing binaries
A binary star system has two stars that move around a common point called the centre of mass. When these stars line up with our view, one star can pass in front of the other. This creates a special kind of variable star called an eclipsing binary.
The brightest light from an eclipsing binary is when both stars are fully visible. When one star moves in front of the other, the light we see gets dimmer and then returns to normal. The first eclipsing binary discovered was Algol, in the constellation Perseus. Its brightness is usually at a level called 2.1, but every 2.867 days, it dims to 3.4 for over nine hours. This happens when the dimmer star passes in front of the brighter one. The idea that this dimming was caused by an eclipse was suggested by John Goodricke in 1783.
Types
An eclipse happens when one space object moves into the shadow of another, blocking it from view. There are different kinds of eclipses depending on which objects are involved.
For example, when the Moon moves between the Sun and Earth, we see a solar eclipse. This can be total, annular, hybrid, or partial. When Earth comes between the Sun and the Moon, we see a lunar eclipse, which can also be penumbral, partial, or central.
Eclipses can also happen on other planets. For instance, the moons Phobos and Deimos can pass in front of the Sun as seen from Mars, causing transits or eclipses. Similar eclipses can also be observed on planets like Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto.
Sun – Moon – Earth: Solar eclipse | annular eclipse | hybrid eclipse | partial eclipse
Sun – Earth – Moon: Lunar eclipse | penumbral eclipse | partial lunar eclipse | central lunar eclipse
Sun – Phobos – Mars: Transit of Phobos from Mars | Solar eclipses on Mars
Sun – Deimos – Mars: Transit of Deimos from Mars | Solar eclipses on Mars
Other types: Solar eclipses on Jupiter | Solar eclipses on Saturn | Solar eclipses on Uranus | Solar eclipses on Neptune | Solar eclipses on Pluto
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