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Old 04-07-2010, 07:20 PM   #4
Agemegos
 
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oz
Default Re: [SPACE] Solar Eclipses on Other Worlds

Quote:
Originally Posted by Trachmyr View Post
Trig was never my strong math, but I get 1.7 degrees... making it appear 3.4times as wide as our own moon. While the sun would be 0.53 degrees, making it appear just a fraction larger than our own. Is that about right?

So if the planet has a 540 hour apparent rotation... thats one and a half hours per degree. If the moon was not inclined to the planet's orbit, then that mean a eclipse would only last about 3 hours and 20 minutes, being a total eclipse for just 1 hour and 45 minutes. Is that right? Much shorter than I was hoping for.
You've overestimated totality. You have calculated the time it takes for the moon to traverse an apparent longitude, i.e. the time from first contact to third contact or from second contact to fourth. But totality lasts only from second contact to third contact. You have to subtract the apparent width of the sun from that of the moon, i.e. 1.17 degrees. Which gives 1 hour 45 minutes maximum duration of totality. (Totality lasts a shorter time towards the northern and southern edges of the totality zone.)

Also, don't forget that a solar eclipse is visible only from a narrow arc on the planet's surface: totality is observable from a strip as wide as the moon's apparent diameter minus the sun's apparent diameter, and at least partial eclipse from a strip as wide as the sum of their apparent diameters. Two-and-a quarter degrees of latitude see any particular eclipse, and about half that see any part of totality. If the inclination of the moon's orbit to the planet's equator is close to zero (likely: tidal forces will tend to reduce obliquity as they increase separation and synchronise rotations) the solar eclipses will be seen only close to the equator. The maximum latitude of the centre-line of the path of totality is arccos {(radius of moon's orbit / radius of planet) * cos (obliquity of moon's orbit)}. If that comes out undefined some eclipses will miss the planet to the north or south, and eclipses will only be visible around ascending node and descending node, i.e. if the moon is near to the points where it crosses the sun's latitude at the time when it happens to be passing the sun's longitude.

Last edited by Agemegos; 04-08-2010 at 04:38 AM.
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