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Solar eclipse of 2006 March 29
The 'solar eclipse that took place on
March 29,
2006' was a total
eclipse of the Sun that was visible from a narrow corridor which traversed half the
Earth. The
magnitude, that is, the ratio between the apparent sizes of the Moon and that of the Sun, was 1.052. The path of totality of the
Moon's shadow began at sunrise in
Brazil and extended across the
Atlantic to
Africa, travelling across
Ghana,
Togo,
Benin,
Nigeria,
Niger,
Chad,
Libya, and a small corner of
Egypt, from there across the
Mediterranean Sea to
Greece (
Kastellórizo) and
Turkey, then across the
Black Sea via
Georgia,
Russia, and
Kazakhstan to Western
Mongolia, where it ended at sunset. A
partial eclipse was seen from the much broader path of the
Moon's
penumbra, including the northern two-thirds of
Africa, the whole of
Europe, and
Central Asia.
Observations
People gathered in large areas where solar eclipse is visible around the World to view the event.
Manchester Astronomical Society, the
Malaysian Space Agency, the
Astronomical Society of the Pacific, as well as dozens of tour groups met at the Apollo temple and the theater in
Side,
Turkey. The San Francisco
Exploratorium featured a live webcast from the site, where thousands took their seats in the ancient, Roman-style theater.
[1]
Almost all actively visited areas in the path of totality had perfect weather. Many observers reported an unusually beautiful eclipse, with many or all effects visible, and a very nice
corona despite proximity to
solar minimum. The partial phase of the eclipse was also visible from the
International Space Station, while the astronauts on board took spectacular pictures of the shadow on the
Earth's surface. At first, it looked as though an orbit correction in the middle of March would bring the ISS in the path of totality, but this correction was postponed.
Notable times and coordinates
| Event | Time (UTC) | Coordinates |
|---|
| Beginning of the general eclipse | 07:36:50 | |
| Beginning of the total eclipse | 08:34:20 | |
| Beginning of the central eclipse | 08:35:25 | |
| Greatest eclipse | 10:11:20 | |
| End of the central eclipse | 11:46:55 | |
| End of the total eclipse | 11:47:55 | |
| End of the general eclipse | 12:45:35 | |
Type of the eclipse
| Nature of the eclipses | Total |
| Area of visibility | Type IV |
| Gamma | 0,3842 |
| Magnitude | 1.052 |
| Duration at greatest eclipse point | 247 s (4 min 7 s) at 10:11:18 UTC, near Chad border of Libya: |
| Maximum width of band | 183.5 km |
Gallery
Satellite failure
Main articles: Optus fleet of satellites#Failures
The satellite responsible for
SKY Network Television, a New Zealand pay TV company, failed the day after this eclipse at around 1900 local time. While SKY didn't directly attribute the failure to the eclipse, they said in a media release that it took longer to resolve the issue because of it, but this claim was refuted by astronomers. The main reason for the failure was because of an aging and increasingly faulty satellite.
[2]
References
★
Fred Espenak and Jay Anderson. "''
Total Solar Eclipse of 2006 March 29''".
NASA Technical publication (NASA/TP-2004-212762), November 2004.
1. http://www.exploratorium.edu/eclipse/2006/index.html
2. Press release by Sky TV. Solar eclipse interferes with satellite restoration Friday, 31 March 2006.
External links
Photos and videos
★
Total eclipse photographs from Turkey
★
Another set of total eclipse photographs from Turkey
★
Photo gallery from Turkey
★
Phases of solar eclipse view from Antalya
★
NASA videos and photos from Libya and Turkey
★
Pictures taken from Smolyan, Bulgaria
★
NASA video of eclipse
★
Solar eclipse images and videos from Libya by traveling NASA employees and scientists
Other resources
★
solar-eclipse-2006.info - Information about the March 29th Solar Eclipse.
★
NASA - Total Solar Eclipse of 2006 March 29
★
Interactive 2006 March 29 Total Solar Eclipse map with local circumstances
★
eclipse.za.net - Umbral Paths of March 29 Eclipse in Africa
★
University of Athens - Solar Eclipse 29/3/2006, Solar Party
★
Solar Total Eclipse of 2006 March 29
★
TÜBİTAK National Observatory - 29 March 2006 Total Solar Eclipse