Solar eclipse of May 20, 2012


The solar eclipse of May 20, 2012 was an annular solar eclipse that was visible in a band spanning through Eastern Asia, the Pacific Ocean, and North America. As a partial solar eclipse, it was visible from northern Greenland to Hawaii, and from eastern Indonesia at sunrise to northwestern Mexico at sunset. The moon's apparent diameter was smaller because the eclipse was occurring only 32 1/2 hours after apogee.
A solar eclipse is an astronomical phenomenon that occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth. An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun's, blocking most of the Sun's light and causing the Sun to look like an annulus. An annular eclipse appears as a partial eclipse over a region of the Earth thousands of kilometres wide.
The annular eclipse was the first visible from the contiguous United States since the solar eclipse of May 10, 1994, and the first in Asia since the solar eclipse of January 15, 2010. The path of the eclipse's antumbra included heavily populated regions of China and Japan, and an estimated 100 million people in those areas were capable of viewing annularity. In the western United States, its path included 8 states, and an estimated 6 million people were capable of viewing annularity. It was the 58th eclipse of the 128th Saros cycle, which began with a partial eclipse on August 29, 984 AD and will conclude with a partial eclipse on November 1, 2282.

Visibility and viewing

The antumbra had a magnitude of.94, stretched wide, and traveled eastbound at an average rate of per second, remaining north of the equator throughout the event. The longest duration of annularity was 5 minutes and 43 seconds, occurring just south of the Aleutian Islands. The eclipse began on a Monday and ended on the previous Sunday, as it crossed the International Date Line.

Asia

The annular eclipse commenced over the Chinese province of Hainan at sunrise, at 6:06 a.m. China Standard Time. Travelling northeast, antumbra of the eclipse approached and passed over the cities of Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Xiamen, reaching Taipei, Taiwan by 6:10 a.m NST. After crossing the East China Sea, it passed over much of eastern Japan, including Nagoya and Tokyo at 7:28 a.m and 7:32 a.m JST respectively, before entering the Pacific Ocean. The penumbra of the eclipse was visible throughout Eastern Asia and various islands in the Pacific Ocean until noon.
The path of the antumbra over highly populated areas allowed at least an estimated 100 million people to view annularity. Because the eclipse took place during the summer monsoon season in Southeast Asia, viewing conditions were not ideal in some areas, including Hong Kong.

North America

After traveling approximately 4,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean, the antumbra entered North America between the coastlines of Oregon and California, reaching the coastal city of Eureka, California at 6:28 p.m PDT. After passing over Medford, Oregon and Redding, California, it had reached Reno, Nevada by 6:31 p.m PDT. The eclipse continued to travel southeast, passing 30 miles north of Las Vegas, Nevada, over St. George, Utah, and reaching the Grand Canyon by approximately 6:35 p.m MST. After passing over Albuquerque, New Mexico and Lubbock, Texas, the eclipse terminated above central Texas at sunset, 8:39 p.m. CST. An estimated 6.6 million people lived under the path of the antumbra. The penumbra was visible throughout most of North America, including the islands of Hawaii.

Eclipse Characteristics

Eclipse Magnitude = 0.94390
Eclipse Obscuration = 0.89094
Gamma = 0.48279
Saros Series = 128th

Conjunction Times

Greatest Eclipse = 20 May 2012 23:52:46.8 UTC
Ecliptic Conjunction = 20 May 2012 23:47:01.3 UTC
Equatorial Conjunction = 20 May 2012 23:59:09.5 UTC

Geocentric Coordinates of Sun and Moon

Sun right ascension = 3 hours, 52 minutes, 43.0 seconds
Moon right ascension = 3 hours, 52 minutes, 30.7 seconds
Earth's shadow right ascension = 15 hours, 52 minutes, 43.0 seconds
Sun declination = 20 degrees, 13 minutes, 15.1 seconds north of Celestial Equator
Moon declination = 20 degrees, 39 minutes, 6.3 seconds north of Celestial Equator
Earth's shadow declination = 20 degrees, 13 minutes, 15.1 seconds south of Celestial Equator
Sun diameter = 1896.2 arcseconds
Moon diameter = 1766.6 arcseconds

Geocentric Libration of the Moon

Latitude: 1.3 degrees south
Longitude: 0.6 degrees west
Direction: 346.3

Related eclipses

Eclipses of 2012

Saros 128

Tritos series

Metonic series

Inex series