March 1980 lunar eclipse

A penumbral lunar eclipse took place on March 1, 1980, the first of three penumbral lunar eclipses in 1980. This subtle penumbral eclipse eclipse may have been visible to a skilled observer at maximum eclipse. 65.455% of the Moon's disc was partially shaded by the Earth (none of it was in total shadow), which caused a gentle shadow gradient across its disc at maximum; the eclipse as a whole lasted 3 hours, 58 minutes and 33.3 seconds.[1]

Visibility

Lunar year series

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 149.

February 25, 1971 March 7, 1989
gollark: PotatOS actually reimplements (partly) the bug with string metatables, even.
gollark: Anyway, it'll be also reparsed for every single "call" of the "lambda" unless Lua does caching internally, so... no.
gollark: PotatOS is allowed to because everyone expects it to do evil stupid things.
gollark: You think I'm joking?
gollark: Also, it modifies the string metatable, and only potatOS is allowed to do that.

See also

Notes

  1. Hermit Eclipse: Saros cycle 142
  2. Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros


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