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SYFY WIRE Bad Astronomy

Ring of Fire Over Australia

By Phil Plait
annulareclipse_may202012.jpg

On May 9/10, the Moon will pass directly in front of the Sun for people living in Australia and southeastern Papua New Guinea. This event is called a solar eclipse, but this oneâs special: the Moon is nearing apogee, its farthest distance from the Earth in its orbit, so it appears slightly smaller than the Sun. That means it cannot block the Sun completely, leaving a ring or annulus of Sun around the edge. Thatâs why this is called an annular eclipse; at most about 95 percent of the Sun is covered by the Moon.

That means even if youâre directly in the path of the maximum eclipse, you wonât see the sky go dark, and you wonât see the corona, the Sunâs ethereal outer atmosphere. But an annular or partial eclipse is still pretty nifty, and worth taking a look.

First, let me clear up the timing. The eclipse starts when the edge of the Moon just nicks the edge of the Sun. That happens today, on May 9, around 21:25 UTC (depending on your exact location; see below). But Australia is way ahead of UTC (Greenwich time); for example, Sydney is 10 hours ahead. So for them, the eclipse would start around 07:25 a.m. on May 10. For me, in Boulder Colorado (UTC - 6) it starts at 15:25 (3:25 p.m.) local time on May 9âbut I wonât see it from here at all, because the geometry is wrong. It's only visible in the southern hemisphere (see the map below).

Wikipedia has some good info on the eclipse (including maps), as does, of course, NASA. The NASA site has a cool interactive Google Earth map with timings listed that appear to account not only for time zone difference but for geometry as well: Even in the same time zone, the eclipse will start at different times for different locations due to the viewing angle to the Moon (like two side-by-side observers seeing a nearby car pass a distant tree at two slightly different times). So if you want to catch the exact moment the eclipse starts, check there! My pal and astronomer Astropixie has some links, too.

If you do live in the right area, I suggest checking out astronomer Michael Zeilikâs eclipse-maps.com, which has fantastic and beautiful maps of the eclipse path. He has even more links there for info. I also have a page with lots of links on how to safely observe an eclipse. Seriously, donât observe it without taking adequate precautions first!

However, if you donât live Down Under, the eclipse will be live streamed by several places. One of them is the Coca Cola Space Science Center in Georgia (a great hands-on museum; I spoke there once); they have an expedition theyâve sent to Australia equipped with a telescope, and theyâll have it all live online. A web search will turn up other live webcasts, too.

I saw an annular eclipse a great many years ago, and it was pretty cool. Iâve still never seen an actual 100 percent total solar eclipse. Itâs one of the very few astronomical events left on my bucket list to see (another being a full-blown aurora). Somedayâ¦but for now, Iâll watch this one online.

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