Archive
05/17/2012 – Ephemeris – A safe way to view this Sunday’s solar eclipse
Ephemeris for Thursday, May 17th. Today the sun will be up for 14 hours and 54 minutes, setting at 9:06. The moon, 3 days before new, will rise at 4:44 tomorrow morning. Tomorrow the sun will rise at 6:10.
Lets talk about a safe viewing method for viewing the sun, for Sunday’s solar eclipse, which starts about 8:19 p.m. Never look directly at the sun, eclipse or no. Pinhole projection is a cool method to watch the eclipse without hurting your eyes. Get a cardboard box, the longer the better. On one narrow end poke a hole, no larger than an 8th of an inch in diameter. You can poke several holes an inch apart of varying sizes to get multiple images of the sun of different brightnesses and sharpness. On the inside of the other end paste a piece of white paper. Point the holey end at the sun and its image will be projected on the white sheet. Tomorrow I’ll tell you where to go to get the best view of the eclipse.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
There’s more information on my blog here.
Pinhole projection:
Note the brightness of the sun was augmented and moon shadow added to give an idea what the solar image would look like. The box is 39 inches long. it gives an image 1/3 of an inch in diameter.
05/15/2012 – Ephemeris – Viewing prospects of Sunday’s solar eclipse viewed from northern lower Michigan
Ephemeris for Tuesday, May 15th. Today the sun will be up for 14 hours and 50 minutes, setting at 9:04. The moon, 3 days past last quarter, will rise at 3:51 tomorrow morning. Tomorrow the sun will rise at 6:13.
Sunday evening’s partial eclipse will begin within a minute of 8:19 p.m. for most locations in the IPR listening area. The sun will be only about a 7 degree angle above the horizon at that time. That’s slightly less than the width of your fist held at arm’s length. At sunset, at about 9:10 p.m., with the flat horizon of Lake Michigan about 50% of the sun will be covered. The farther inland you are, or east from the shore, the start of the eclipse will be about the same time, but sunset will be earlier one minute every 12 miles east you are. An obstructed horizon will make sunset earlier. Thursday and Friday I’ll have safe eclipse observing tips. Or go to my May 8th entry at bobmoler.wordpress.com for an illustrated entry.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
05/14/2012 – Ephemeris – Next Sunday’s annular solar eclipse
Ephemeris for Monday, May 14th. Today the sun will be up for 14 hours and 47 minutes, setting at 9:03. The moon, 2 days past last quarter, will rise at 3:27 tomorrow morning. Tomorrow the sun will rise at 6:14. | This Sunday evening we will, clouds willing, be able to see a piece of a solar eclipse before the sun sets. In northwest lower Michigan, we’ll see about 50 minutes tops at the Lake Michigan shore. This eclipse is an annular eclipse, where the moon isn’t big enough to completely cover the sun leaving a ring or annulus. The area affected by the partial eclipse stretches from east Asia to North America, from the Arctic Ocean to the South Pacific. The path of where the annular phase can be seen, stretches from south China to Texas. In the United States the annular shadow will cross from southern Oregon, and northern California, to Texas at sunset. We’ll see the very end of the partial eclipse.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum

Eclipse map of the May 20, 2012 annular solar eclipse. Credit: NASA
How to safely view the May 20, 2012 solar eclipse
Note: Parts of this posting are geared to the Grand Traverse region of Michigan wheer the partial eclipse is interrupted by sunset.
We get a chance to view a solar eclipse visible for about 40 minutes on the evening of the 20th this month. Solar eclipses are rather rare events if you stay at one spot on the earth. For the whole earth there are at least two or three solar eclipses that occur in a year, and as many lunar eclipses. To see a lunar eclipse one only has to be on the night side to the earth at the time. A solar eclipse requires you to be in the path of the moon’s shadow.
We are getting a chance to see a partially eclipsed sun. Solar eclipses are highly personal events. The exact timing and what you’ll see depends on your location. The society will be holding an eclipse watch at the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lake Shore lake Michigan Overlook on Pierce Stocking Scenic Drive. In Traverse City, a good vantage point to watch is along the south of east sides of the bays. For both locations the eclipse will start at 8:19 p.m., with the eclipse starting 2 seconds earlier at the Lake Michigan Overlook at 8:19:17 p.m. The sun will set at 9:12 p.m. at the overlook and 2 minutes earlier in Traverse City.
The times I’ve derived for the above is from the website CalSky.com., a not often easy site to navigate. Once you get your location input the calendar feature is very comprehensive.
Solar eclipses or eclipses of the sun, as they are sometimes referred to are listed as three types: partial, total, and annular. Every solar eclipse has a partial phase, where the moon covers only part of the sun. In a total eclipse the moon covers, for a few minutes, the entire photosphere (bright face) of the sun, An annular eclipse is where the moon doesn’t appear large enough to cover the face of the sun, leaving a bright ring or annulus around the moon. This also lasts a few minutes at best.
If you look at your shadow cast by the sun, you’ll notice that the shadow is fuzzy. That fuzzy outer part of your shadow has a name and its called the penumbra. There you are partially blocking the sun’s light. The dark inner shadow is called the umbra, where we get the word umbrella, in which the sun is totally blocked. It just so happens that the moon’s dark umbral shadow just reaches the earth at the moon’s closest.
The May 20th eclipse is classed as an annular eclipse. The area affected by the partial eclipse stretches from east Asia to North America, from the Arctic Ocean to the South Pacific. The path of annularity, where the annular phase can be seen, stretches from south China to Texas. In the United States the annular shadow will cross southern Oregon, northern California, Nevada, southern Utah, Colorado, northern Arizona, cross New Mexico and end in Texas at sunset.
Since the sun is north of the celestial equator, the north end of the eclipse zone stretches farther east than the central or southern parts of the eclipse area. Therefore we will see nearly half of the partial portion of the eclipse. The eclipse map can be found on NASA’s web site here. Select the first entry, and select the May 20th eclipse.
How to safely observe the eclipse
The question with any solar eclipse is: Can I view it safely? The answer is yes, if you take precautions. One gets the impression from all the warnings that looking at the sun during the eclipse is more dangerous than normal. That isn’t true. It’s just not less dangerous. Normally we don’t look at the sun, so we don’t think of it. During the partial phase of the eclipse, its total light is dimmer, but the face of the sun is just as bright and dangerous to look at without proper viewing methods.
The easiest and safest way to view a solar eclipse is with pinhole projection. I tested one a few weeks ago we had a long narrow box about 4 feet long. I put a small hole in one end. It happened to be a 1/8th inch hole, and put a clipboard with a sheet of white paper on the other end and got a respectable sized image of the sun.. On eclipse day I will replace the one pinhole with several of different sizes. The larger the hole the brighter but fuzzier image, the smaller the hole the dimmer and sharper the image.

Pinhole Projection of the sun. Solar image brightened and moon shadow added, however sun diameter is correct.
Various outlets have solar eclipse filters which are made of aluminized mylar which go for about a dollar. They should be safe if used as directed.
Solar filters for telescopes must be placed in front of the objective and not at the eyepiece. These can be obtained from Enerdyne in Suttons Bay, Orion, OPT and other online sources. Order early!. Also remember to cover your finder telescope or get a filter for it too.
The telescope itself can project a large image. See the following image from the 1994 solar eclipse. Use an inexpensive but low power eyepiece in case the sun’s heat damages it.
Be safe and have a great time. There’s an even better solar eclipse on August 21, 2017, whose path of totality crosses the United States from coast to coast.
05/03/2012 – Ephemeris – Eclipse cycles
Ephemeris for Thursday, May 3rd. The sun rises at 6:29. It’ll be up for 14 hours and 21 minutes, setting at 8:50. The moon, 2 days before full, will set at 5:11 tomorrow morning.
Eclipses of the sun and moon were most terrifying events for the ancient and primitive peoples. The Chinese thought a dragon was devouring the sun would bang on gongs and shoot arrows into the air to drive the dragon away. It worked every time. Predicting these eclipses became an important matter for ancient astronomers. It was the Chaldeans several centuries before the common era that apparently discovered the interval at which like eclipses occur. The period of 18 year 11 and a third days is called the saros cycle. There are many saros cycles running at any one time. A saros series contains 71 or 72 eclipses, crossing the earth slowly from north to south or south to north. We’ll talk more about eclipses later this month.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
For more information check out Saros in Wikipedia

Saros 136 animation, Public Domain (official work for NASA by Fred Espenak)
Above is an animation of eclipse paths running south to north for saros 136.
05/01/2012 – Ephemeris – The May 20th Eclipse
Ephemeris for Tuesday, May 1st. The sun rises at 6:32. It’ll be up for 14 hours and 15 minutes, setting at 8:47. The moon, 2 days past first quarter, will set at 4:09 tomorrow morning.
(Note: The eclipse visible from most of the United States will be interrupted by sunset. See the Addendum for a link to NASA’s page on the eclipse.)
Let’s give you a heads up on the solar eclipse that will occur on the evening of May 20th. In northern lower Michigan we will see the tail end of the eclipse as the moon’s shadow leaves the face of the earth. The shadow will touch the earth in eastern Asia, cross the Pacific and into North America. This is an annular eclipse, meaning that the moon is too far away to completely cover the face of the sun, leaving a ring (or annulus) of bright sun around the moon at the very center of the eclipse. Some residents of northern California and southern Oregon to west Texas will be able to see this annulus. Your visual safety is paramount when viewing an eclipse and over the next two weeks I’ll be giving you tips on how to view the eclipse safely.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
Here’s a NASA Acrobat file detailing the eclipse. http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/OH/OHfigures/OH2012-Fig01.pdf
Here’s the Eclipses of 2012 NASA page that links to the above page. It has useful links for those, unlike us are located in the southwestern United States.
04/30/2012 – Ephemeris – Preview May Skies
Ephemeris for Monday, April 30th. The sun rises at 6:33. It’ll be up for 14 hours and 13 minutes, setting at 8:46. The moon, 1 day past first quarter, will set at 3:41 tomorrow morning.
Tomorrow we’ll start the month when the promise of spring is finally fulfilled. Daylight hours in the Interlochen/Traverse City area will increase from 14 hours and 15 minutes tomorrow to 15 hours 19 minutes on the 31st. The altitude, or angle, of the sun above the southern horizon at local noon will ascend from 60 degrees today to 67 degrees at month’s end. The altitude of the sun in the Straits area will be a degree lower than that but your daylight will be a few minutes longer. Local apparent noon this month, when the sun passes due south, will be about 1:38 p.m. The big event of this month will be a partial eclipse of the sun on Sunday May 20th, where we’ll see about 45 minutes of the eclipse as the sun sets.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
01/04/11 – Ephemeris – Solar eclipse for the Old World today
Tuesday, January 4th. The sun will rise at 8:19. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 56 minutes, setting at 5:15. The moon is new today, and won’t be visible.
There is a partial solar eclipse in progress for Europe, North Africa and as far a China. This is the companion to the lunar eclipse we had December 21st. Since the lunar eclipse was total, this solar eclipse is not centrally aligned. Eclipses occur in seasons with an interval of a bit less than 6 months[, making a complete eclipse year of 346 days]. Eclipses generally occur in pairs in each eclipse season, one lunar eclipse followed two weeks later by a solar eclipse or vice versa. On rare occasions three eclipse cam occur at two week intervals: A partial solar eclipse , a very central lunar eclipse and another partial solar eclipse. Such a triad will occur this year. A partial solar eclipse on June 1st., a total lunar eclipse June 15th and another partial solar eclipse July 1st. Non will be visible from here.
*Text in brackets was omitted due to time constraints
* Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Check out the NASA Eclipse web site for 2011.

