Solar eclipse of December 4, 1983

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Solar eclipse of December 4, 1983
SE1983Dec04A.png
Map
Type of eclipse
Nature Annular
Gamma 0.4015
Magnitude 0.9666
Maximum eclipse
Duration 241 sec (4 m 1 s)
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Max. width of band 131 km (81 mi)
Times (UTC)
Greatest eclipse 12:31:15
References
Saros 132 (44 of 71)
Catalog # (SE5000) 9473

An annual solar eclipse occurred on December 4, 1983. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth. An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun's, blocking most of the Sun's light and causing the Sun to look like an annulus (ring). An annular eclipse appears as a partial eclipse over a region of the Earth thousands of kilometres wide.

Related eclipses

Solar eclipses of 1982-1985

Each member in a semester series of solar eclipses repeats approximately every 177 days and 4 hours (a semester) at alternating nodes of the Moon's orbit.

Note: Partial solar eclipses on January 25, 1982 and July 20, 1982 occur in the previous lunar year eclipse set.

Solar eclipse series sets from 1982-1985
Ascending node   Descending node
Saros Map Saros Map
117 SE1982Jun21P.png
June 21, 1982
Partial
122 SE1982Dec15P.png
December 15, 1982
Partial
127 SE1983Jun11T.png
June 11, 1983
Total
132 SE1983Dec04A.png
December 4, 1983
Annular
137 SE1984May30A.png
May 30, 1984
Annular
142 SE1984Nov22T.png
November 22, 1984
Total
147 SE1985May19P.png
May 19, 1985
Partial
152 150px
November 12, 1985
Total

Saros 132

It is a part of Saros cycle 132, repeating every 18 years, 11 days, containing 71 events. The series started with partial solar eclipse on August 13, 1208. It contains annular eclipses from March 17, 1569 through March 12, 2146, hybrid on March 23, 2164 and April 3, 2183 and total eclipses from April 14, 2200 through June 19, 2308. The series ends at member 71 as a partial eclipse on September 25, 2470. The longest duration of annular was 6 minutes, 56 seconds on May 9, 1641, and totality will be 2 minutes, 14 seconds on June 8, 2290.[1]

<templatestyles src="Template:Hidden begin/styles.css"/>

Inex series

This eclipse is a part of the long period inex cycle, repeating at alternating nodes, every 358 synodic months (≈ 10,571.95 days, or 29 years minus 20 days). Their appearance and longitude are irregular due to a lack of synchronization with the anomalistic month (period of perigee). However, groupings of 3 inex cycles (≈ 87 years minus 2 months) comes close (≈ 1,151.02 anomalistic months), so eclipses are similar in these groupings.

Inex series members between 1901 and 2100:

SE1926Jan14T.png
January 14, 1926
(Saros 130)
SE1954Dec25A.png
December 25, 1954
(Saros 131)
SE1983Dec04A.png
December 4, 1983
(Saros 132)
SE2012Nov13T.png
November 13, 2012
(Saros 133)
SE2041Oct25A.png
October 25, 2041
(Saros 134)
SE2070Oct04A.png
October 4, 2070
(Saros 135)
SE2099Sep14T.png
September 14, 2099
(Saros 136)

Metonic series

The metonic series repeats eclipses every 19 years (6939.69 days), lasting about 5 cycles. Eclipses occur in nearly the same calendar date. In addition the octon subseries repeats 1/5 of that or every 3.8 years (1387.94 days).

This series has 21 eclipse events between July 11, 1953 and July 11, 2029.

Notes

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

Cite error: Invalid <references> tag; parameter "group" is allowed only.

Use <references />, or <references group="..." />

References


<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>

  1. http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEsaros/SEsaros132.html