July 1972 lunar eclipse

Summary

A partial lunar eclipse occurred on Tuesday, July 25, 1972 and Wednesday, July 26, 1972, the second of two lunar eclipses in 1972 with an umbral eclipse magnitude of 0.54271. A partial lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth moves between the Sun and Moon but the three celestial bodies do not form a straight line in space. When that happens, a small part of the Moon's surface is covered by the darkest, central part of the Earth's shadow, called the umbra. The rest of the Moon is covered by the outer part of the Earth's shadow called the penumbra.[1] The moon's apparent diameter was 3.2 arcseconds smaller than the January 30, 1972 lunar eclipse.

July 1972 lunar eclipse
Partial eclipse
Date26 July 1972
Gamma0.71167
Magnitude0.54271
Saros cycle138 (27 of 83)
Partiality160 minutes, 9.6 seconds
Penumbral312 minutes, 32.3 seconds
Contacts (UTC)
P104:39:21.9
U105:55:37.5
Greatest07:15:38.4
U408:35:47.1
P409:51:54.2

Visibility edit

The partial eclipse was visible in Australia, Pacific, Americas, western Africa, seen rising over eastern Australia on the evening on Wednesday, July 26, 1972 (Tuesday, July 25, 1972 in west of International Date Line) and setting over Atlantic on morning of Wednesday, July 26, 1972.

 

Relation to other lunar eclipses edit

Eclipses in 1972 edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Saros series 138
  2. ^ Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros

External links edit