November 1937 lunar eclipse
A partial lunar eclipse took place on November 18, 1937.
Visibility
Related lunar eclipses
Ascending node | Descending node | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saros | Date Viewing |
Type Chart |
Saros | Date Viewing |
Type Chart | |
110 | 1937 May 25 |
Penumbral |
115 | 1937 Nov 18 |
Partial | |
120 | 1938 May 14 |
Total |
125 | 1938 Nov 07 |
Total | |
130 | 1939 May 03 |
Total |
135 | 1939 Oct 28 |
Partial | |
140 | 1940 Apr 22 |
Penumbral |
145 | 1940 Oct 16 |
Penumbral |
Half-Saros cycle
A lunar eclipse will be preceded and followed by solar eclipses by 9 years and 5.5 days (a half saros).[1] This lunar eclipse is related to two partial solar eclipses of Solar Saros 122.
November 12, 1928 | November 23, 1946 |
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gollark: The bee eugenics machine takes a batch of 12 bees, scans them, picks the best ones according to our fitness function, sends the bad ones into the singularity compressor, and sends the good ones into the apiaries.
gollark: Bee genome scanning machinery.
gollark: It's quite slow.
gollark: Oh, we're doing bee eugenics.
gollark: Maths stuff is objectively-true-given-some-axioms.
See also
- List of lunar eclipses
- List of 20th-century lunar eclipses
Notes
- Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros
External links
- 1937 Nov 18 chart Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC
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