Posts Tagged eclipse
Earth’s Umbra
Today’s APOD shows views of the lunar eclipse that took place on December 10th. (For the record: I slept through it. Eep.) Beautiful photo montage!
The dark, inner shadow of planet Earth is called the umbra. Shaped like a cone extending into space, it has a circular cross section most easily seen during a lunar eclipse. For example, last Saturday the Full Moon slid across the southern half of Earth’s umbral shadow, entertaining moonwatchers around much of the planet. In the total phase of the eclipse, the Moon was completely within the umbra for 51 minutes. Recorded from Beijing, China, this composite eclipse image uses successive pictures from totality (center) and partial phases to trace out a large part of the umbra’s curved edge. Background stars are visible in the darker eclipse phases. The result shows the relative size of the shadow’s cross section at the distance of the Moon, as well as the Moon’s path through Earth’s umbra.
Partial Sun & ISS
The past few weeks have been particularly eclipse-y. Eclipse-ful? Ecliptic? And while I’m asking questions, how does Thierry Legault do it? He’s the KING of transit photos. (This photo of the January 4 partial solar eclipse, plus ISS transit, was featured on APOD yesterday. As it should be.)
Lunar Eclipse
Two images of the beautiful total lunar eclipse seen last week on the Winter Solstice.
A big, bright, beautiful Full Moon slid into planet Earth’s shadow early Tuesday morning. Remarkably, the total lunar eclipse coincided with the date of the December Solstice. During the eclipse, the best viewing in North America found the coppery lunar disc high in a cold winter sky, the Moon reddened by light filtering into the Earth’s dark central shadow or umbra. The light comes from all the sunsets and sunrises, seen from a lunar perspective around the edges of a silhouetted Earth. Passing closer to the center of the umbra, the Moon’s southern hemisphere (left) appears darker in this eclipse image, recorded from Deerlick Astronomy Village, Georgia, USA. The picture is a digital composite, a separate longer exposure added to an eclipse frame to capture the surrounding star field.
Modern Eclipse
Posted by Danielle in Food & Drink on April 2, 2010
Saw this striking wine bottle packaging by Rhinocerosred Design over at Curved White. Beautiful work!
Myanmar Eclipse
I don’t have much to say about this photo, aside from that it is STUNNING.
A hole crossed the Sun for a few minutes this month, as seen across a thin swath of planet Earth. The event on January 15 was actually an annular solar eclipse, and the hole was really Earth’s Moon, an object whose dark half may appear even darker when compared to the tremendously bright Sun. The Moon was too far from Earth to create a total solar eclipse, but instead left well placed observers with a bright surrounding circle called the ring of fire. Pictured above was a complete solar annular eclipse sequence as seen above the Ananda Temple in Bagan, Myanmar. The image of the ancient temple, built around the year 1100, was taken after sunset on the same day of the eclipse. The next solar eclipse will be a total solar eclipse during 2010 July.
…and that Myanmar will remind me of J. Peterman, probably for years to come.
“You most likely know it as Myanmar, but it will always be Burma to me.” — “J. Peterman”, Seinfeld
Eclipse
Here are some of my favorite photos from last week’s solar eclipse: the above image was featured on APOD, the rest come from Spaceweather’s Solar Eclipse Gallery.
I love the framing of the next shot:
24 percent of January Solar eclipse and seagulls over the north of Shiraz city. You can see the sunspot 1040 in top of the eclipsed disc. Sunspot 1040 is a member of new Solar Cycle 24.
Blue Eclipse
This photo was featured on APOD over the weekend, and I simply had to share it. The sharpness and color is just fantastic!
The International Year of Astronomy 2009 ended with a Blue Moon and a partial lunar eclipse, as the second Full Moon of December grazed the Earth’s shadow on December 31st. The New Year’s Eve Blue Moon eclipse was visible throughout Europe, Asia, Africa and parts of Alaska, captured in this two exposure composite in cloudy skies over Saint Bonnet de Mure, France. Playing across the Moon’s southern reaches, the edge of Earth’s umbra, or dark central shadow, appears on the right side along with the prominent ray crater Tycho. At maximum eclipse, the umbra covered only about 8 percent of the diameter of the lunar disk.
Art: Realistic solar eclipse
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on January 28, 2008
Today’s APOD showcases what historians believe is the first accurately-depicted solar eclipse found in art:
The above painting was completed in 1735 by Cosmas Damian Asam, a painter and architect famous in early eighteenth century Germany. Clearly drawn is not only a total solar eclipse, but the solar corona and the diamond ring effect visible when sunlight flows only between mountains on the Moon. The person depicted viewing these eclipse phenomena is St. Benedict.












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My name is Danielle Signor, and I am a space cadet. 









