February 2017 lunar eclipse
Contacts (UTC) | |
---|---|
P1 | 22:34:16 (10 February) |
Greatest | 0:43:53 |
P4 | 2:53:26 |
A penumbral lunar eclipse took place at the Moon's ascending node on 11 February 2017, the first of two lunar eclipses in 2017. It was not quite a total penumbral lunar eclipse. It occurred the same day as comet 45P/Honda–Mrkos–Pajdušáková made a close approach to Earth (0.08318 AU). It also occurred on the Lantern Festival, the first since 9 February 2009. Occurring only 4.4 days after perigee (Perigee on 6 February 2017), the moon's apparent diameter was larger.
Visibility
It was visible from the Americas, Europe, Africa, and most of Asia.
Visibility map |
Gallery
- Popayán, Colombia, 23:43 UTC (10 February)
- Kissimmee, Florida, 0:00 UTC
- Tampa, Florida, 0:11 UTC
- Time lapse images from Melbourne, Florida
- Bracciano, Italy, 0:29 UTC
- Macon, Georgia, 0:38 UTC
- Naperville, Illinois, 1:23 UTC
- Innsbruck, Austria, ~2:00 UTC
Related eclipses
Eclipses of 2017
- A penumbral lunar eclipse on 11 February.
- An annular solar eclipse on 26 February.
- A partial lunar eclipse on 7 August.
- A total solar eclipse on 21 August.
Lunar year series
Lunar eclipse series sets from 2016–2020 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Descending node | Ascending node | |||||||
Saros | Date | Type Viewing | Gamma | Saros | Date Viewing | Type Chart | Gamma | |
109 | 2016 Aug 18 | Penumbral | 1.56406 | 114 | 2017 Feb 11 | Penumbral | −1.02548 | |
119 | 2017 Aug 07 | Partial | 0.86690 | 124 | 2018 Jan 31 | Total | −0.30143 | |
129 | 2018 Jul 27 | Total | 0.11681 | 134 | 2019 Jan 21 | Total | 0.36842 | |
139 | 2019 Jul 16 | Partial | −0.64300 | 144 | 2020 Jan 10 | Penumbral | 1.07270 | |
149 | 2020 Jul 05 | Penumbral | −1.36387 | |||||
Last set | 2016 Sep 16 | Last set | 2016 Mar 23 | |||||
Next set | 2020 Jun 05 | Next set | 2020 Nov 30 |
Saros series
It is part of Saros cycle 114.
Lunar Saros series 114, repeating every 18 years and 11 days, has a total of 71 lunar eclipse events including 13 total lunar eclipses.
First Penumbral Lunar Eclipse: 0971 May 13
First Partial Lunar Eclipse: 1115 Aug 07
First Total Lunar Eclipse: 1458 Feb 28
First Central Lunar Eclipse: 1530 Apr 12
Greatest Eclipse of Lunar Saros 114: 1584 May 24
Last Central Lunar Eclipse: 1638 Jun 26
Last Total Lunar Eclipse: 1674 Jul 17
Last Partial Lunar Eclipse: 1890 Nov 26
Last Penumbral Lunar Eclipse: 2233 Jun 22
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 annular solar eclipses of Solar Saros 121.
7 February 2008 | 17 February 2026 |
---|---|
Tritos series
- Preceded: Lunar eclipse of March 14, 2006
- Followed: Lunar eclipse of January 12, 2028
Tzolkinex
- Preceded: Lunar eclipse of December 31, 2009
- Followed: Lunar eclipse of March 25, 2024
See also
References
- ^ Mathematical Astronomy Morsels, Jean Meeus, p.110, Chapter 18, The half-saros
External links
- 2017 Feb 11 chart: Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC
- 11 Feb 2017 - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse - Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
- Pakistan to witness lunar eclipse on February 11
- v
- t
- e
by era
by saros series
Partial eclipses
- 1903 Apr
- 1914 Mar
- 1916 Jul
- 1952 Feb
- 1952 Aug
- 1954 Jul
- 1955 Nov
- 1956 May
- 1958 May
- 1959 Mar
- 1961 Mar
- 1961 Aug
- 1963 Jul
- 1965 Jun
- 1970 Feb
- 1970 Aug
- 1972 Jul
- 1973 Dec
- 1974 Jun
- 1976 May
- 1977 Apr
- 1979 Mar
- 1981 Jul
- 1983 Jun
- 1988 Aug
- 1990 Aug
- 1991 Dec
- 1992 Jun
- 1994 May
- 1995 Apr
- 1997 Mar
- 1999 Jul
- 2001 Jul
- 2005 Oct
- 2006 Sep
- 2008 Aug
- 2009 Dec
- 2010 Jun
- 2012 Jun
- 2013 Apr
- 2017 Aug
- 2019 Jul
- 2021 Nov
- 2023 Oct
- → 2024 Sep
- 2026 Aug
- 2028 Jan
- 2028 Jul
- 2030 Jun
- 2034 Sep
- 2035 Aug
- 2037 Jul
- 2039 Jun
- 2039 Nov
- 2041 May
- 2041 Nov
- 2046 Jan
- 2046 Jul
- 2048 Jun
- 2052 Oct
- 2055 Aug
- 2075 Jun
- 2099 Apr
Total eclipses
- 1504 Mar
- 1910 May
- 1913 Sep
- 1920 May
- 1950 Apr
- 1950 Sep
- 1953 Jan
- 1953 Jul
- 1954 Jan
- 1956 Nov
- 1957 May
- 1957 Nov
- 1960 Mar
- 1960 Sep
- 1963 Dec
- 1964 Jun
- 1964 Dec
- 1967 Apr
- 1967 Oct
- 1968 Apr
- 1968 Oct
- 1971 Feb
- 1971 Aug
- 1972 Jan
- 1974 Nov
- 1975 May
- 1975 Nov
- 1978 Mar
- 1978 Sep
- 1979 Sep
- 1982 Jan
- 1982 Jul
- 1982 Dec
- 1985 May
- 1985 Oct
- 1986 Apr
- 1986 Oct
- 1989 Feb
- 1989 Aug
- 1990 Feb
- 1992 Dec
- 1993 Jun
- 1993 Nov
- 1996 Apr
- 1996 Sep
- 1997 Sep
- 2000 Jan
- 2000 Jul
- 2001 Jan
- 2003 May
- 2003 Nov
- 2004 May
- 2004 Oct
- 2007 Mar
- 2007 Aug
- 2008 Feb
- 2010 Dec
- 2011 Jun
- 2011 Dec
- 2014 Apr
- 2014 Oct
- 2015 Apr
- 2015 Sep
- 2018 Jan
- 2018 Jul
- 2019 Jan
- 2021 May
- 2022 May
- 2022 Nov
- → 2025 Mar
- 2025 Sep
- 2026 Mar
- 2028 Dec
- 2029 Jun
- 2029 Dec
- 2032 Apr
- 2032 Oct
- 2033 Apr
- 2033 Oct
- 2036 Feb
- 2036 Aug
- 2037 Jan
- 2040 May
- 2040 Nov
- 2043 Mar
- 2043 Sep
- 2044 Mar
- 2044 Sep
- 2047 Jan
- 2047 Jul
- 2048 Jan
- 2050 May
- 2050 Oct
- 2051 Apr
- 2051 Oct
- 2054 Feb
- 2054 Aug
- 2055 Feb
- 2058 Jun
- 2065 Jul
- 2069 May
- 2072 Aug
- 2076 Jun
- 2083 Jul
- 2084 Jan
- 2087 May
- 2090 Sep
- 2094 Jun
- 2123 Jun
- 2170 May
Penumbral eclipses
- Category
- → symbol denotes next eclipse in series
This lunar eclipse-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e