February 2009 lunar eclipse

Summary

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
9 February 2009

From Chennai, India at 14:29 UTC

The Moon passes right to left through the Earth's southern penumbral shadow.
Series (and member) 143 (18 of 73)
Gamma -1.0640
Magnitude 0.8994
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Penumbral 3:58:49
Contacts (UTC)
P1 12:38:50
Greatest 14:38:16
P4 16:37:39

The Moon moves right to left (west to east) through the constellation Leo

A penumbral lunar eclipse took place on 9 February 2009, the first of four lunar eclipses in 2009, and being the deepest of three penumbral eclipses.[1] It also happened on the Lantern Festival, the first since 20 February 1989. The tables below contain detailed predictions and additional information on the Penumbral Lunar Eclipse of 9 February 2009.

Eclipse season edit

This is the second eclipse this season.

First eclipse this season: 26 January 2009 Annular Solar Eclipse

Visibility edit

The eclipse was not visible in the East coast of the United States, South America and southernmost Mexico, Western Africa and western Europe. Best visibility was expected over most of Asia, the Western US, Mexico and throughout the Pacific region.[2]

 
This simulated view shows the Earth and Sun as viewed from the center of the Moon near contact points P1 and P4. The eclipse will be visible from Earth from the locations of the world as seen on the Earth above.

Map edit

 

Photo edit

Relation to other eclipses edit

Eclipses of 2009 edit

Lunar eclipse series sets from 2006–2009
Descending node   Ascending node
Saros #
and photo
Date
Viewing
Type
Chart
Gamma Saros #
and photo
Date
Viewing
Type
Chart
Gamma
113
 
2006 Mar 14
 
penumbral
 
1.0211 118
 
2006 Sep 7
 
partial
 
−0.9262
123
 
2007 Mar 03
 
total
 
0.3175 128
 
2007 Aug 28
 
total
 
−0.2146
133
 
2008 Feb 21
 
total
 
−0.3992 138
 
2008 Aug 16
 
partial
 
0.5646
143
 
2009 Feb 09  penumbral
 
−1.0640 148
 
2009 Aug 06
 
penumbral
 
1.3572
Last set 2005 Apr 24 Last set 2005 Oct 17
Next set 2009 Dec 31 Next set 2009 Jul 07


Half-Saros cycle edit

A lunar eclipse will be preceded and followed by solar eclipses by 9 years and 5.5 days (a half saros).[3] This lunar eclipse is related to two partial solar eclipses of Solar Saros 150.

5 February 2000 15 February 2018
   

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "NASA - Eclipses During 2009". eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
  2. ^ Penumbral Lunar Eclipse of 2009 Feb 09
  3. ^ Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros

External links edit

  • Penumbral Eclipse of the Moon: 2009 February 09
  • 2009 Feb 09 chart: Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC