Future Eclipse Paths On Internet
Presently, the NASA eclipse bulletins are published 12 to 18 months before
each eclipse. This will soon be increased to 24 months or more. However, there
have been a growing number of requests for eclipse path data with an even
greater lead time. To accommodate the demand, predictions have been generated
for all central solar eclipses from 1995 through 2000 using the JPL DE/LE 200
ephemerides. All predictions use the Moon's the center of mass; no corrections
have been made to adjust for center of figure. The value used for the Moon's
mean radius is k=0.272281. The umbral path characteristics have been predicted
at 2 minute intervals of time compared to the 6 minute interval used in
Fifty Year Canon of Solar Eclipses: 1986-2035 [Espenak, 1987]. This
should provide enough detail for making preliminary plots of the path on larger
scale maps. Note that positive latitudes are north and positive longitudes are
west.
The paths for the following seven eclipses are currently available via the
Internet:
- 29 Apr 1995 - Annular Solar Eclipse
- 24 Oct 1995 - Total Solar Eclipse
- 9 Mar 1997 - Total Solar Eclipse
- 26 Feb 1998 - Total Solar Eclipse
- 22 Aug 1998 - Annular Solar Eclipse
- 16 Feb 1999 - Annular Solar Eclipse
- 11 Aug 1999 - Total Solar Eclipse
The tables can be accessed with Mosaic through SDAC home page, or directly
here.
Comments, corrections or suggestions should be sent to Fred Espenak either via
regular or e-mail (u32fe@lepvax.gsfc.nasa.gov). For Internet related
problems, please contact Joe Gurman (gurman@uvsp.gsfc.nasa.gov). Either
one of us can also be contacted for more detailed descriptions of formats and
directories or instructions for downloading files using a Web client such as
Mosaic, or via anonymous ftp.
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