January 1955 lunar eclipse
A penumbral lunar eclipse took place on January 8, 1955.[1]
![](../I/m/Lunar_eclipse_chart_close-1955Jan08.png)
Visibility
Related lunar eclipses
Lunar year series
Descending node | Ascending node | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saros | Date Viewing |
Type Chart |
Saros | Date Viewing |
Type Chart | |
103 | 1951 Feb 21![]() |
Penumbral![]() |
108 | 1951 Aug 17![]() |
Penumbral![]() | |
113 | 1952 Feb 11![]() |
Partial![]() |
118 | 1952 Aug 5![]() |
Partial![]() | |
123 | 1953 Jan 29![]() |
Total![]() |
128 | 1953 Jul 26![]() |
Total![]() | |
133 | 1954 Jan 19![]() |
Total![]() |
138 | 1954 Jul 16![]() |
Partial![]() | |
143 | 1955 Jan 8![]() |
Penumbral![]() | ||||
Last set | 1951 Mar 23 | Last set | 1951 Sep 15 | |||
Next set | 1955 Nov 29 | Next set | 1955 Jun 5 |
Half-Saros cycle
A lunar eclipse will be preceded and followed by solar eclipses by 9 years and 5.5 days (a half saros).[2] This lunar eclipse is related to two partial solar eclipses of Solar Saros 150.
January 3, 1946 | January 14, 1964 |
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gollark: Although it is *mostly* likely to be too fast to observe much.
gollark: But generally you can get some idea of whether the first sections of some values match based on timing information if the thing is naively checking their equality.
gollark: Yes, I was just wrong and bad.
gollark: Don't proper password hashing algorithms make it take effectively the same time in some magic way.
gollark: oh no.
See also
- List of lunar eclipses
- List of 20th-century lunar eclipses
Notes
- Hermit Eclipse: Saros cycle 143
- Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros
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