Ini artikel yang lebih panjang.
hati2 jangan melihat ke gerhananya secara
langsung, walaupun tidak kerasa apa2 ke mata.
menurut artikel ini, Jakarta tidak akan melihatnya.

fbs

Solar Eclipse to Cause 'Counterfeit Twilight' 


By Joe Rao
SPACE.com Skywatching Columnist
posted: 23 January 2009
09:19 am ET


If
you plan to be anywhere from the southern third of Africa, to southern and
eastern India, southeastern China, Southeast Asia, and virtually all of
Australia on Monday, January 26, you will be treated to a view of a solar
eclipse. 
This will be an annular
or ring eclipse of the sun, so called because the moon's disk will appear
too small to completely cover the sun's disk. This circumstance is due to the
fact that the moon will be a bit farther from Earth than average.  
An annular eclipse, though
a rare and amazing sight, is far different from a total
solar eclipse. Since the sun's brilliant surface or photosphere never
completely disappears, the panoply of striking phenomena seen during a total
eclipse such as the corona and prominences and the dramatic darkening of the
sky accompanied by some of the brighter stars and planets, will not be
seen.  
Rather, at maximum,
skywatchers will see a "penny atop a nickel" effect, with the sun
mimicking a blazing ring of light rimming the dark silhouette of the moon
(creating the so-called "annulus" or ring effect).  Put another
way, the dark cone of the moon's shadow, called the umbra, will not be long
enough to reach the Earth.  So, anybody who is standing on the patch of
Earth to which the umbra points sees up all around it – a ring, or annulus of 
sunlight surrounding the dark
moon.  
A strange "counterfeit
twilight" falls over the landscape, but it falls far short of even a
miniature night; in essence, this is really nothing more than a very fancy 
partial
eclipse.  
Where it's visible
The moon's faint outer shadow
or penumbra first touches Earth at dawn in the South Atlantic Ocean about
500 mi. (800 km.) off the South African coast.  A bit over an hour later,
the central axis of the shadow – the so-called "antumbra" – arrives,
in the South Atlantic about 1,600 mi. (2,600 km.) west of southern Namibia, 
Africa.  
From here, the path of the
annular eclipse curves east-southeast, completely missing southernmost Africa.  
As seen from Cape Agulhas, the geographic southern tip of the African 
continent, the
moon will appear to cover 74 percent of the sun's diameter as the antumbra
passes a few hundred miles to the south.  
Unfortunately, virtually
the entire annularity track falls over open waters, sliding first over the
South Atlantic, and then tracking east, then northeast over the Indian Ocean.  
The eclipse reaches its maximum at
local apparent noon, pretty much over the middle of the Indian Ocean.  A 
shipboard  observer would see the moon's dark
outline wholly inside the sun for 7 minutes and 54 seconds, changing the sun
into a "ring of
fire."             
The first landfall by the
antumbra finally comes in the late afternoon about half way from Australia to 
Sri Lanka over the Cocos Iand Keeling Islands, which belong
to Australia and are thickly covered with coconut palms and other vegetation.  
As the path of annularity
approaches its end, it sweeps northeast through Indonesia, and in the process
crosses over portions of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Malaysia and Sulawesi, before
finally coming to its end at local sunset over the Celebes Sea.  Yet, the
antumbra somehow manages to avoid all of the major population centers in this
part of the world.  Its northern limit will slide just to the southeast of
Palembang (Sumatra) and its southern limit will even more narrowly miss Jakarta
(Java), which currently is the eleventh largest city, fifth largest
metropolitan area and ninth most densely populated city in the world. 
Taking a brief jog across the Java Sea, the shadow crosses over into Borneo, the
southern limit of the antumbra passing just to the north and west of Balikpapan 
and its
500,000 inhabitants.  
For all of these cities, at
maximum eclipse, the sun will not appear as a ring; rather it will mimic a
horseshoe with pointed tips. 
Outside the path of
annularity, a partial eclipse will be visible.  The closer you are to the
annular track, the larger the "bite" that the passing moon will
appear to take out of the sun.  In Australia, the eclipse falls on
Australia Day; a National holiday. Much of that country (except Tasmania) will 
get a
glimpse of the eclipse coinciding (or nearly so) with local sunset.   
A listing of local
circumstances for selected locations within the eclipse zone can be found here. 
Be careful!
To look at the sun without
proper eye protection is dangerous.  Even if you are in the path of the
annular eclipse you will need to protect your eyes.  
By far, the
safest wayto view a solar eclipse is to construct a "pinhole camera." 
A pinhole or small opening is used to form an image of the sun on a screen
placed about three feet behind the opening.  Binoculars or a small
telescope mounted on a tripod can also be used to project a magnified image of
the sun onto a white card.  Just be sure not to look through the
binoculars or telescope when they are pointed toward the sun!
A variation on the pinhole
theme is the "pinhole mirror."  Cover a pocket-mirror with a
piece of paper that has a quarter-inch hole punched in it.  Open a
sun-facing window and place the covered mirror on the sunlit sill so it
reflects a disk of light onto the far wall inside.  The disk of light is
an image of the sun's face.  The farther away from the wall is the better;
the image will be only one inch across for every 9 feet from the mirror. Of
course, don't let anyone look at the sun in the mirror.
Acceptable filtersfor unaided visual solar
observations include aluminized Mylar.  Some astronomy dealers carry Mylar
filter material specially designed for solar observing. Also acceptable is
shade 14 arc-welder's glass, available for just a few of dollars at welding
supply shops. 
Unacceptable
filtersinclude sunglasses, color film negatives, black-and-white film that 
contains no
silver, photographic neutral-density filters, and polarizing filters. 
Although these materials have very low visible-light transmittance levels, they
transmit an unacceptably high level of near-infrared radiation that can cause a
thermal retinal burn.  The fact that the sun appears dim, or that you feel
no discomfort when looking at the sun through the filter, is no guarantee that
your eyes are safe. 
Later this year . .
. 
On July 22, the longest
total solar eclipse in the 21st century will take place, as the moon's dark
umbral shadow races across central India, the People's Republic of China
(including Shanghai), and some of the Ryukyu Islands of Japan.  At the
point of greatest eclipse, totality will last 6 minutes 39 seconds; the longest
of any eclipse between 1991 and 2132; it is an eclipse that is eagerly being
awaited by millions who live along the path of totality and countless thousands
more from around the world who plan to position themselves within the path.

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