Innovea Technologies

Innovea Technologies

Hill Country

Hill Country Scientific

Crabtree Creek

Quick Eclipse Photo

Well I have this photograph. I just pulled one of the later ones out of the stack of about 400 total. There will be more once I have some time to sift through them all. What I’ll probably do is take the best 2 or 3 and toss them on Flickr where this one is:

Total Sagittarius – Raleigh, North Carolina

Enjoy. It was a little hazy out there in the bitter cold but I think I managed. There still hasn’t been the need for frostbite amputation of the fingers yet. This guy was on a Canon 400D with a Tamron AF70-200mm Di [f/2.8 - ISO100 - 70-200mm:188mm for 2.0 seconds].

Total Lunar Eclipse – December 21, 2010

December 21, 2010 Total Lunar Eclipse Viewing Chart - Mr Eclipse, 2010

Well well well. The time is now again. During the early morning hours of Tuesday December 21, there will be a total eclipse of the moon. It will be visible in North America, but I’ll get to that in a moment.

You often see all kinds of words like ecliptic, node, umbra, penumbra, etc. when reading or learning about lunar eclipses. The only two words we really need to concern ourselves with are the penumbra and the umbra. Both of these refer to two distinct shadows cast by Earth into outer space by light emanating from the Sun. Let’s, for the sake of ease, keep these descriptions simple.

The penumbra is a cylindrical shadow. It’s diffuse and lighter in shade. The reason for the light diffusion is because the Sun, despite looking small from 93 million miles away, is very large compared to Earth. So there is some scattering of light from all the points of light all over the exterior of the Sun.

The umbra, on the other hand, is a cone-shaped shadow inside the penumbra cylinder. It’s base is on Earth and it’s tip is a point of convergence in space. The umbra is a more concentrated shadow; . . . → Read More: Total Lunar Eclipse – December 21, 2010