
The eclipse as seen from France
On
August 11 1999, a
total eclipse of the
Sun, with an
eclipse magnitude of 1.029, occurred.
The path of the
Moon's shadow began in the
Atlantic Ocean, before noon traversing
Cornwall,
Devon, northern
France, southern
Germany,
Austria,
Hungary, and northern
Serbia. Its maximum was at 11:03 UTC at in
Romania, and it continued across
Bulgaria, the
Black Sea,
Turkey,
Iran, southern
Pakistan and
India.
It was the first total eclipse visible from Europe since
July 22 1990, and the first visible in the
United Kingdom since
June 29 1927.
Observations
There is little doubt that this was the most-viewed total solar eclipse in human history, although some areas in the path of totality offered impaired visibility due to adverse weather conditions.
The San Francisco
Exploratorium featured a live webcast from a crowded town square in
Amasya,
Turkey. The moon's shadow was also observed from the Russian
Mir space station; during the eclipse, video from Mir was broadcast live on television. Some of the organized eclipse-watching parties along the path of totality set up video projectors on which people could watch the shadow as it raced towards them
[1].
Notable times and coordinates

NASA-produced map of the eclipse with coordinates,
click here for detail.
| Event | Time (UTC) |
|---|
| Beginning of the general eclipse | 08:26:17 |
| Beginning of the total eclipse | 09:29:55 |
| Beginning of the central eclipse | 09:30:53 |
| Greatest eclipse | 11:03:07 |
| End of the central eclipse | 12:35:33 |
| End of the total eclipse | 12:36:26 |
| End of the general eclipse | 13:40:08 |
Type of the eclipse
| Nature of the eclipse | Total |
| Gamma | 0.5063 |
| Magnitude | 1.0286 |
| Duration at greatest eclipse point | 142 s (2 min 22 s) at 11:03:07 UTC, in Romania: |
| Maximum width of band | 112.3 km |
Photograph

Totality observed from France
References
★
View of eclipse from the Mir space station
★
Fred Espenak and Jay Anderson. "''
Total Solar Eclipse of 1999 August 11''".
NASA, November 2004.
★ http://umbra.nascom.nasa.gov/eclipse/990811/rp.html
★ http://www.hermit.org/Eclipse1999/
★
Exploratorium Webcast: Solar Eclipse August 11, 1999
External links