June 21st Annular Eclipse- Images and Information
Jay Pasachoff’s article about the annular eclipse in the February 2021 Astronomy Magazine
AstronomyMag-Feb2021=ASY-SE0221_jay-review
Williamstown, June 20, 2020: tomorrow will be sad since we are unable to be in annularity for the eclipse. It will be the first solar eclipse I will have missed in a long time. peak is 5:30 UT in Oman, 6:30 UT in India So in Williamstown, I’ll look for the ~1:30 am links; the 12:47 am link is for Congo, when the eclipse begins and it then takes 3/4 hour to travel to the Arabian peninsula and then another hour to travel to India. time in Oman: 1:30 am EDT (Williamstown)= 5:30 UTC time in India: 2:30 am EDT (Williamstown= 6:30 UTC Michael Zeiler posted some links below for streaming. (I am enjoying having his globe and his new Atlas of eclipses, both of which he advertises at the end below.) I am consulting with scientists in Saudi Arabia, Oman, and India, advising about how best to observe the eclipse—and also asking them to make meteorological measurements (temperature/humidity/pressure) today, tomorrow, and Monday. My own web page from the annular solar eclipse from December 26, about six months ago, from India with Jagdev Singh and Stephen Inbanathan ([email protected], American College, Madurai) there, along with Naomi Pasachoff, Rob Lucas, and Helen Robinson, is at http://totalsolareclipse.org or directly to https://sites.williams.edu/eclipse/december-26-2019-india-annular-eclipse/ Xavier Jubier’s zoomable, clickable map to see circumstances is at: http://xjubier.free.fr/en/site_pages/solar_eclipses/xSE_GoogleMap3.php?Ecl=+20200621&Acc=2&Umb=1&Lmt=1&Mag=1&Max=1&Map=ROADMAP Jay Pasachoff from Williamstown |
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