Partial Lunar Eclipse:
June 26, 2010
Geographic Region:
eastern Asia, Australia,
Pacific Ocean, western
Americas
The first lunar eclipse of
2010 occurs at the Moon's
ascending node in western
Sagittarius about 3° east of
the Lagoon Nebula (Messier
8). It is visible from much
of the Americas, the Pacific
and eastern Asia. The Moon's
contact times with Earth's
shadows are listed below.
|
Penumbral
Eclipse Begins: |
|
08:57:21 UT |
|
Partial
Eclipse Begins: |
|
10:16:57 UT |
|
Greatest
Eclipse: |
|
11:38:27 UT |
|
Partial
Eclipse Ends: |
|
12:59:50 UT |
|
Penumbral
Eclipse Ends: |
|
14:19:34 UT |
At the instant of greatest
eclipse4 the umbral eclipse
magnitude5 will reach
0.5368. At that time the
Moon will be at the zenith
for observers in the South
Pacific. In spite of the
fact that barely half of the
Moon enters the umbral
shadow (the Moon's northern
limb dips 16.2 arc-minutes
into the umbra), the partial
phase still lasts 2 2/3
hours.
The figure above shows a map
of Earth showing the regions
of eclipse visibility. New
England and eastern Canada
will miss the entire eclipse
since the event begins after
moonset from those regions.
Observers in western Canada
and the USA will have the
best views with moonset
occurring sometime after
mid-eclipse. To catch the
entire event, one must be
located in the Pacific or
eastern Australia.
The June 26 partial lunar
eclipse belongs to Saros
120, a series of 83 eclipses
in the following sequence:
21 penumbral, 7 partial, 25
total, 7 partial, and 23
penumbral lunar eclipses.
Eclipse map and predictions
courtesy of Fred Espenak -
NASA/Goddard Space Flight
Center.
For more information on
solar and lunar eclipses,
see Fred Espenak's Eclipse
Home Page:
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/eclipse.html
|