Solar eclipse of December 26, 2019


An annular solar eclipse occurred on December 26, 2019. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the Sun for a viewer on Earth. An annular solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is smaller than the Sun's, blocking most of the Sun's light and causing the Sun to look like an annulus. An annular eclipse appears as a partial eclipse over a region of the Earth thousands of kilometres wide.
The annularity was visible in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Oman, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Northern Mariana Islands, and Guam.

Details

Eclipse Magnitude0.97010
Eclipse Obscuration0.94110
Gamma0.41351
Saros series132

Greatest Eclipse26 Dec 2019 05:17:43.6 UTC
Ecliptic Conjunction26 Dec 2019 05:13:07.5 UTC
Equatorial Conjunction26 Dec 2019 05:14:34.3 UTC

CoordinateSunMoon
Right Ascension18.318.3
Declination-23.4-23
Diameter 1951.41866.0

Contact EventTime UTC
First Penumbral External Contact02:29:51.3
First Umbral External Contact03:34:32.2
First Central Line03:36:04.1
First Umbral Internal Contact03:37:36.3
First Penumbral Internal Contact05:01:26.1
Greatest Eclipse05:17:43.6
Last Penumbral Internal Contact05:34:04.7
Last Umbral Internal Contact06:57:50.7
Last Central Line06:59:25.9
Last Umbral External Contact07:01:00.9
Last Penumbral External Contact08:05:43.9

Visibility and viewing

It was the last solar eclipse of 2019. The central path of the 2019 annular eclipse passed through Saudi Arabian Peninsula, southern India, Sumatra, Borneo, Philippines and Guam. A partial eclipse was visible thousands of kilometers wide from the central path. It covered small parts of Eastern Europe, much of Asia, North/West Australia, East in Africa, Pacific and Indian Ocean. The eclipse started with an antumbra having a magnitude of.96; it stretched 164 kilometers wide, and traveled towards the east at an average rate of 1.1 kilometer per second. The longest duration of annularity was 3 minutes and 40 seconds, at 5.30 UT1 occurring in the South China Sea.
, India.
The eclipse began in Saudi Arabia about 220 kilometers northeast of Riyadh at 03:43 UT1 and ended in Guam at 06:59.4 UT1. It reached India near Kannur, Kerala, at 03:56 UT1. The shadow reached the southeast coast of India at 04:04 UT1. Traveling through northern Sri Lanka, it headed into the Bay of Bengal. The next main visible places were Palau, Sumatra and Singapore. It then passed through the South China Sea, crossed Borneo and the Celebes Sea, the Philippines archipelago and then headed towards the western Pacific. The antumbral shadow encountered Guam at 6:56 UT1 and rose back into space.

Gallery

Related eclipses

Eclipses of 2019

Astronomers Without Borders collected eclipse glasses for redistribution to Latin America and Asia for their 2019 eclipses from the Solar eclipse of August 21, 2017.

Tzolkinex

Saros 132

Metonic series