Solar eclipse of November 13, 2012


A total solar eclipse took place on 13–14 November 2012. Because it crossed the International Date Line it began in local time on November 14 west of the date line over northern Australia, and ended in local time on November 13 east of the date line near the west coast of South America. Its greatest magnitude was 1.0500, occurring only 12 hours before perigee, with greatest eclipse totality lasting just over four minutes. A solar eclipse 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. A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is larger than the Sun's, blocking all direct sunlight, turning day into darkness. Totality occurs in a narrow path across Earth's surface, with the partial solar eclipse visible over a surrounding region thousands of kilometres wide.
It was the 45th eclipse of the 133rd Saros cycle, which began with a partial eclipse on July 13, 1219 and will conclude with a partial eclipse on September 5, 2499.

The tables below contain detailed predictions and additional information on the Total Solar Eclipse of 13 November 2012.

Eclipse Characteristics

Eclipse Magnitude = 1.05004
Eclipse Obscuration = 1.10259
Gamma = -0.37189
Saros Series = 133rd

Conjunction Times

Greatest Eclipse = 13 Nov 2012 22:11:48.2 UTC
Ecliptic Conjunction = 13 Nov 2012 22:07:59.9 UTC
Equatorial Conjunction = 13 Nov 2012 22:18:04.7 UTC

Geocentric Coordinates of Sun and Moon

Sun right ascension = 15 hours, 18 minutes, 6.7 seconds
Moon right ascension = 15 hours, 17 minutes, 51.2 seconds
Earth's shadow right ascension = 3 hours, 18 minutes, 6.7 seconds
Sun declination = 18 degrees, 15 minutes, 2.6 seconds south of Celestial Equator
Moon declination = 18 degrees, 37 minutes, 29.5 seconds south of Celestial Equator
Earth's shadow declination = 18 degrees, 15 minutes, 2.6 seconds north of Celestial Equator
Sun diameter = 1939.8 arcseconds
Moon diameter = 2004.8 arcseconds

Geocentric Libration of Moon

Latitude: 1.0 degrees south
Longitude: 0.5 degrees east
Direction: 16.5

Visibility

For this eclipse, totality was visible from northern Australia to about 4° north of the Chilean Juan Fernández Islands in the southern Pacific Ocean where totality ended. The most populous city to experience totality was Cairns, which had 2 minutes of totality an hour after daybreak with the sun at an altitude of 14°. Norfolk Island, a small Pacific island east of Australia, experienced a partial eclipse with a maximum of 98% of the sun obscured at 08:37 NFT and an altitude of 42°.
New Zealand experienced a partial eclipse. Auckland had 87.1% of the sun obscured, whereas Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin respectively had 76.3%, 68.8% and 61.5% of the sun obscured. Maximum eclipse over New Zealand occurred around 10:30 NZDT, with Auckland at 10:27, Wellington at 10:34, Christchurch at 10:35 and Dunedin at 10:36.
Most of Chile and parts of Argentina saw a partial eclipse at sunset. In some places over half the sun was obscured. In Chile, Valdivia in Los Ríos saw 63% obscured, Quellón in Los Lagos saw 54% obscured. Chilean coastal locations were ideally situated to observe an eclipsing sunset over the Pacific Ocean. Points further north, up to about La Serena, saw the eclipse begin as the sun was setting.
West of the International Date Line the eclipse took place on the morning of November 14. The maximum eclipse totality, of duration 4 min 2 sec, occurred east of the International Date Line on November 13, approximately 2000 km east of New Zealand, and 9600 km west of Chile.
On the morning of November 14, skies in Auckland were cloudy, obscuring much of the eclipse, which peaked at 10:27 NZDT. Cloud also obscured the moment of totality at Cairns, disappointing many tourists that had flocked to the area. Eclipse chasers along the northern beaches up through to Port Douglas generally got a clear view however.

Photo gallery

Related eclipses

Eclipses of 2012

Saros 133

Inex series

Tritos series

Metonic series