Solar eclipse of January 22, 1841

A partial solar eclipse occurred on January 22, 1841 during summer. 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. A partial solar eclipse occurs in the polar regions of the Earth when the center of the Moon's shadow misses the Earth.

Solar eclipse of January 22, 1841
Map
Type of eclipse
NaturePartial
Gamma-1.5516
Magnitude0.0316
Maximum eclipse
Coordinates63.1°S 56.6°E / -63.1; 56.6
Times (UTC)
Greatest eclipse17:24:16
References
Saros109 (80 of 81)
Catalog # (SE5000)9141

It was the first of four partial eclipses that took place that year, two in a space of two months each, the next on was on February 21 covered a small part of the Northern Hemisphere.[1] It was the last two of solar saros 109, the last one was on February 3, 1859.[2]

Description

The eclipse was visible in the a part of northern Antarctica which had a 24-hour daylight that time and a part of the southwesternmost portion of the Indian Ocean and a very tiny part of the Atlantic. The edge of the eclipse included the area dividing the Indian and the Atlantic oceans.

It showed about up to nearly 10% obscurity in Antarctica. The greatest eclipse was nearly about 30% of the way between Antarctica and the southernmost of Africa at 63.1 S, 56.6 E at 17:24 UTC (9:36 PM local time).[1]

The subsolar marking was in the Pacific Ocean hundreds of kilometers west of the Chilean-Peruvian border.

See also

References

  1. "Solar eclipse of January 22, 1841". NASA. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  2. "Solar Saros 109". NASA. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
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