Besselian Elements for the Annular Solar Eclipse of 1990 Jan 26

Fred Espenak

The following table contains the Besselian elements for the Annular Solar Eclipse of 1990 Jan 26 .

The geographic coordinates of the eclipse path are in the Path Table . The global visibility of the eclipse is shown on an Orthographic Map . The features of this map are described in the Key to Solar Eclipse Path Tables. The path of the eclipse is displayed in greater detail on a Google Map .


            

Besselian Elements for the Annular Solar Eclipse of 1990 Jan 26

Equatorial Conjunction: 18:52:52.1 TDT J.D. = 2447918.286715 (Sun & Moon in R.A.) (=18:51:55.2 UT) Ecliptic Conjunction: 19:20:59.0 TDT J.D. = 2447918.306239 (Sun & Moon in Ec. Lo.) (=19:20:02.1 UT) Instant of 19:31:23.9 TDT J.D. = 2447918.313471 Greatest Eclipse: (=19:30:27.0 UT) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Gamma = -0.9457 Ephemerides = VSOP87/ELP2000-82 Eclipse Magnitude = 0.9670 Lunation No. = -123 ΔT = 56.9 s Saros Series = 121 (59/71) Lunar Radius k1 = 0.272488 (Penumbra) Shift in Δb = 0.00" Constants: k2 = 0.272281 (Umbra) Lunar Position: Δl = 0.00" --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geocentric Coordinates of Sun & Moon at Greatest Eclipse (VSOP87/ELP2000-82): Sun: R.A. = 20h35m55.4s Moon: R.A. = 20h37m14.5s Dec. =-18°37'40.0" Dec. =-19°28'27.0" Semi-Diameter = 16'14.5" Semi-Diameter = 15'38.0" Eq.Hor.Par. = 08.9" Eq.Hor.Par. = 0°57'22.4" --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Polynomial Besselian Elements for: 1990 Jan 26 20:00:00.0 TDT (=t0) n x y d l1 l2 μ 0 0.567782 -0.798949 -18.62073 0.556949 0.010757 116.84974 1 0.5074202 0.1864375 0.010146 -0.0001339 -0.0001332 14.999114 2 -0.0000508 0.0001613 0.000004 -0.0000113 -0.0000112 3 -0.0000069 -0.0000027 Tan ƒ1 = 0.0047488 Tan ƒ2 = 0.0047251 At time t1 (decimal hours), each Besselian element is evaluated by: a = a0 + a1*t + a2*t^2 + a3*t^3 (or a = Σ [an*t^n]; n = 0 to 3) where: a = x, y, d, l1, l2, or μ t = t1 - t0 (decimal hours) and t0 = 20.000 TDT The Besselian elements were derived from a least-squares fit to elements calculated at five uniformly spaced times over a six hour period centered at t0. The Besselian elements are valid over the period 17.00 ≤ t0 ≤ 23.00 TDT. Note that all times are expressed in Terrestrial Dynamical Time (TDT). Saros Series 121: Member 59 of 71 eclipses in series.

Annular Solar Eclipse of 1990 Jan 26


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Acknowledgments

Predictions for the Annular Solar Eclipse of 1990 Jan 26 were generated using the VSOP87/ELP2000-82 solar and lunar ephemerides and a value of ΔT = 56.9 seconds. The accuracy of the northern and southern edges of the eclipse path are limited to approximately 1-2 kilometers due to the lunar limb profile.

All eclipse calculations are by Fred Espenak, and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy. Permission is freely granted to reproduce this data when accompanied by an acknowledgment:

"Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA's GSFC"

For more information, see: NASA Copyright Information

2008 Mar 27