Solar eclipse of December 17, 2066

Solar eclipse of December 17, 2066
Map
Type of eclipse
Nature Total
Gamma -0.4043
Magnitude 1.0416
Maximum eclipse
Duration 3m 14s
Coordinates 47.4S 175.8E
Max. width of band 152 km
Times (UTC)
Greatest eclipse 0:23:40
References
Saros 133 (48 of 72)
Catalog # (SE5000) 9657

A total solar eclipse will occur on December 17, 2066. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partially 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, blocking all direct sunlight, turning day into darkness. Totality occurs in a narrow path across the surface of the Earth, while a partial solar eclipse will be visible over a region thousands of kilometres wide.

Contents

Related eclipses

Solar eclipses 2065-2069

This set of solar eclipses repeat approximately every 177 days and 4 hours at alternating nodes of the moon's orbit.

118 July 3, 2065

Partial
123 December 27, 2065

Partial
128 June 22, 2066

Annular
133 December 17, 2066

Total
138 June 11, 2067

Annular
143 December 6, 2067

Hybrid
148 May 31, 2068

Total
153 November 24, 2068

Partial
158 May 20, 2069

Partial

Saros 133

Solar Saros 133, repeating every 18 years, 11 days, contains 72 events. The series started with a partial solar eclipse on July 13, 1219. It contains annular eclipses from November 20, 1435 through January 13, 1526, with a hybrid eclipse on January 24, 1544. It has total eclipses from February 3, 1562 through June 21, 2373. The series ends at member 72 as a partial eclipse on September 5, 2499. The longest duration of totality was 6 minutes, 50 seconds on August 7, 1850.[1] The total eclipses of this saros series are getting shorter and farther south with each iteration. Thus it is becoming increasingly irrelevant as the most populous continents are in the northern hemisphere. Each eclipse is heading closer towards Antarctica.

Series members 39-49 occur between 1901 and 2100:

39 40 41

September 9, 1904

September 21, 1922

October 1, 1940
42 43 44

October 12, 1958

October 23, 1976

November 3, 1994
45 46 47

November 13, 2012

November 25, 2030

December 5, 2048
48 49

December 17, 2066

December 27, 2084

Notes

References