Annular Solar Eclipses
Eclipse
path on 14 Oct 23 confined to the Americas
I had read all I could about solar eclipses, but I was quite
unprepared for the experience of totality. It was electrifying, sublime,
awesome and humbling all at the same time.
- Fred Espenak
Prelude
A
spectacular annular solar eclipse is due next Saturday (14th October 2023). It will be confined solely to the western
hemisphere and visible in large parts of the American continents as can be seen
in the graphic above.
The
excitement expressed by Fred Espenak, the great eclipse chaser and inveterate
‘computer’ of eclipses for NASA, is applicable to a total solar eclipse,
not as much to an annular eclipse like the one due on the 14th of
this month. It will still be a memorable
experience if one is located anywhere on the path of annularity. In any case, it will have to be ignored by
everyone in India, and indeed in most parts of the world, because the entire
path, let alone the much narrower and crucial path of annularity, covers a
different part of the globe.
Apart from describing the forthcoming annular eclipse in the context of solar eclipses in general, and two eclipses due within a short span of each other in the USA in particular, I take this opportunity to recount my earlier experience with two annular eclipses that I have viewed, both in India.
Solar
Eclipses
First,
let me review what solar eclipses are. The following text is adapted from one
of my earliest blog articles on eclipses (see here).
Eclipses
of the Sun and the Moon as viewed from any place on Earth are possible only
because of a fortuitous and accidental circumstance associated with the Sun and
the Moon. While the Sun is about four hundred times bigger than the Moon, it is
also nearly as many times farther away from the Earth as is the Moon.
Therefore, they appear to be of nearly the same apparent size (about 0.5 degree
in angular diameter) as seen from the Earth. On the occasions when these three
bodies are nearly in a line, solar or lunar eclipses, which may be partial or
total, are possible. A partial solar eclipse results when the lunar disk hides
only a portion of the solar disk on a new moon day. A total solar
eclipse happens when the lunar disk is slightly larger than the solar disk and
blots it out of sight from the earth at the viewing site, revealing
the spectacular sight of the solar corona, which can be viewed with the naked
eye. An Annular Eclipse results if
the lunar disk is slightly smaller than the solar disk and a thin peripheral
ring of the Sun can still be seen at maximum eclipse.
Total
and annular solar eclipses are extremely rare events at any specific
place on earth and last only a few minutes at most. For the
duration of a total solar eclipse, day turns nearly into night and
produces some breathtakingly beautiful effects, justifying Espenak’s exhilaration
cited above. In contrast, a part of the sunlight gets through at all times of
an annular eclipse, even at the peak of annularity, and to that extent it is
still daylight. However, the brightness of the sunlight getting through depends
on the fraction of the sun’s disc obscured, and it will be a minimum during the
peak of the annularity phase. In any case, it would be dangerous to look at an
annular solar eclipse with the naked eye, as also a total one, except during
the very brief period of totality when the Sun is completely obscured.
With reference to the diagram below, total and annular eclipses are possible at locations in the umbral and antumbral shadow regions, and partial ones outside of them, in the penumbral shadow regions.
[From nineplanets.org]
Annular Eclipse of 14 Oct 23
The really significant part of the progression of this annular eclipse can be followed live on Saturday, 14th October 2023 from 9:00 PM to 11.30 PM (approximate times), with the maximum occurring around 10:24 PM, on several online channels, including:
https://www.timeanddate.com/live/eclipse-solar-2023-october-14
Below is a map of the USA showing the path of annularity in relation to some of the prominent geographical locations. The map also shows the appearance of the Sun at maximum eclipse at locations outside the path of annularity where the eclipse is only partial, and nowhere as attractive to observe as within the path of annularity.
Path of annularity of 14Oct23 Eclipse
Below is a simulation of how the ‘ring of fire’
produced by the visible part of the Sun around the lunar disc will appear at a
place like San Antonio in Texas.
Besides a few total solar eclipses, I have had the opportunity to view two annular solar eclipses, both of them in recent times and within India. The first one, on 15 Jan 2010, viewed from Dhanushkodi in Tamilnadu, has been described in detail in one of my blog articles (see here). Here is a sequence of pictures taken at that time:
The more recent annular eclipse that I viewed, along with a group of associates and friends, was on the morning of 26th December 2019 at Bekal Beach near Kasargod in Kerala state. Here is a set of unedited pictures sent over WhatsApp and headlined by the local ‘Star of Mysore’ newspaper the same evening:
[*Note:
An important parameter associated with eclipses
is its magnitude, which is the fraction of the angular diameter of the celestial
body being eclipsed, in this case the Sun. For the annular eclipses of 15Jan10, 26Dec19
and 14Oct23, the magnitudes are 0.919, 0.970, and 0.952 respectively. Clearly, the forthcoming eclipse promises to
be no more spectacular than the one in 2019.
On the other hand, the annular eclipse of 21Jun20,
visible in parts of northern India, had a magnitude of 0.994. A small group of
us were to have witnessed it in Suratgarh, Rajasthan, but unlucky to miss out
the trip because of travel restrictions due to the Covid pandemic. From
descriptions of those who did view it, I understand it was pretty much like a
total eclipse lasting just a few seconds.]
USA – Eclipses in Quick Succession
The USA is the rich ‘beneficiary’ of as many as three great solar eclipses within a short period of seven years, from 2017 to 2024. All three of them touch vast areas of continental USA as the respective maps indicate. The first one, on 21 Aug 2017, was a total solar eclipse that could be seen over a vast stretch of land spanning from the northwest to central east (see map below). The second is the forthcoming annular eclipse that is the topic of this article.
Total Solar Eclipse of 21 Aug 2017
The third is another great total solar eclipse that is due next year on 8th April, again covering a vast stretch of the country, and beyond, as the following map indicates:
Total Solar Eclipse of 08 Apr 2024
If the two previous maps are superposed, we end
up getting the following composite map showing both the paths, and very
interestingly, their intersection as well.
Personal regrets
Three great solar eclipses within a span of less
than seven years meant both an opportunity and a challenge for me, challenge
because any place in USA is as far away from my home as it can get, with the
consequent drain on my resources. It is pointless to go to a far-off place just
to see an eclipse however unique it may be. To get the best out of the visit,
one has to make it part of a much longer tourist trip. I did that in 2017, making a successful visit
to Nashville, Tennessee, to view the total eclipse as a part of a long trip to
USA and then on to Europe.
Now, I find myself unable to visit USA twice
within a span of six months and needing to settle for only one visit. For this reason, I am regrettably opting out
of the forthcoming annular eclipse in favour of a more spectacular total one on
8th April next year, somewhere north of Austin, Texas. Naturally, I intend to make it part of a
longer trip, including Mexico and Canada apart from USA.
The bottom line
Apart from the generally very short duration, the
rarity of total or annular solar eclipses at or near any particular location on
earth means that we may be lucky to see one in an entire lifetime. The rarity is compounded by the vagaries of
weather, especially cloud cover, at the time of totality or annularity, which
may spoil the best part of the show completely and make the journey almost worthless. However carefully the observing location on
the central path of the eclipse may have been chosen, luck also plays a significant
role in one’s success. I have been particularly lucky in having been able to
see all six of the events I have observed so far in different countries,
including two in India, totally successfully. I hope that not only my
opportunity but also my luck continues unabated.
No comments:
Post a Comment