Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Solar Saros 140

Saros cycle series 140 for solar eclipses From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Solar Saros 140
Remove ads

Saros cycle series 140 for solar eclipses occurs at the Moon's descending node, repeating every 18 years, 11 days, containing 71 eclipses, including 47 umbral eclipses (11 total, 4 hybrid, 32 annular). The first eclipse in this series was on 16 April 1512 and the last will be on 1 June 2774. The most recent eclipse was an annular eclipse on 26 February 2017 and the next will be an annular eclipse on 9 March 2035.

Thumb
Historic saros cycle animation
Thumb
January 3, 1927 event
from Buenos Aires, Argentina
Partiality from annular event
Series member 24
Thumb
February 26, 2017 event
from Buenos Aires, Argentina
Partiality from annular event
Series member 29

The longest duration of totality was 4 minutes, 10 seconds on August 12, 1692 while the longest annular eclipse will be 7 minutes 35 seconds on 15 November 2449.

This solar saros is linked to Lunar Saros 133.

More information Series members 23–53 occurring between 1901 and 2450: ...
Remove ads

Umbral eclipses

Umbral eclipses (annular, total and hybrid) can be further classified as either: 1) Central (two limits), 2) Central (one limit) or 3) Non-Central (one limit). The statistical distribution of these classes in Saros series 140 appears in the following table.

More information Classification, Number ...
Remove ads

All eclipses

Summarize
Perspective

Note: Dates are given in the Julian calendar prior to 15 October 1582, and in the Gregorian calendar after that.

More information Saros, Member ...
Remove ads

Notes

  1. Non-central
  2. Began as annular and ended as total
  3. No northern limit
  4. No northern limit
  5. No northern limit

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads