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Eclipses are as old as the Earth. Ancient peoples saw the sun as
the source of all warmth, light and life, and so were very upset
when the sun disappeared. There are many old stories that recognise
that it is the moon covering the sun, but try to explain what
happens by saying the moon is arguing with the sun, or that they
left the sky to check on things down on Earth. Some cultures
thought the sun was being eaten by a dragon or some other monster,
and made lots of noise to frighten it away. (It always worked,
didn't it?!)
An eclipse occurs when the moon passes in front of the sun and can
be seen from somewhere on Earth. If the moon is quite lined up
across the middle of the sun, it is a Partial Eclipse. Depending on
were the moon and Earth are in their obits (remember they travel an
ellipse not a circle), sometimes the moon looks smaller than the
sun, sometimes bigger. If the moon looks smaller it won't
completely cover the sun even when it crosses the middle. This is
called an Annular Eclipse. When the moon looks bigger, it can
completely cover the sun, causing a Total Eclipse. The moon casts a
shadow, called the Umbra, down on the Earth, and you must be under
this shadow to actually see the Total Eclipse. The path this shadow
traces as the earth turns is called the Path of Totality. Outside
this shadow path, the eclipse will look like a Partial
Eclipse.
Mathematics has allowed us now to measure lots of things about
eclipses and so calculate exactly when they will happen, where they
can be seen from, and what they will look like.
The total eclipse of the sun that took place on August 11th 1999
could be seen from parts of Europe, the Middle East and South Asia.
It was the 21st eclipse in a series of eclipses that was reported
by van den Berg in 1955. This series is called Saros 145, and its
first eclipse (just a short partial eclipse) took place in the year
1639. The series will last for a total of 1370.3 years, ending in
the year 3009 after 77 eclipses. The series began high up in the
Northern Hemisphere and is gradually moving southward. The next one
in this series will happen in 2017 over the USA. The time that the
sun is covered is increasing, until in 2522 it will be dark for 7
minutes. Then the eclipses will gradually become shorter
again.