Partial Solar Eclipse Visible from Asia

The first solar eclipse of 2007 takes place March 18-19 and will treat selected skywatchers in parts of Asia.

The alignment between the Sun, Earth and Moon is not, however, exact enough to produce a total eclipse; the Moon's apparent position in the sky relative to the Sun will be displaced somewhat to the north.  So only the southern portion of the Moon's outer shadow (the penumbra) will touch the Earth, while the dark, narrow cone of the umbra completely misses the Earth and swings 288 miles (463 kilometers) above the Ural Mountains of western Russia.  Only flying to that height would you be able to see the Sun totally obscured by the Moon.

  • Solar Eclipse Images

The partial eclipse will be visible from much of Asia, with the exceptions of the Philippines, Indonesia and most of Japan's Honshu Island.  See the table below for specific local circumstances.

The penumbral shadow first touches Earth in the Bay of Bengal, just off of the Coromandel Coast of India at 00:38 GMT.  It then sweeps up in a north-northeast direction, covering most of Asia by 02:00 GMT.  The point of greatest eclipse occurs at 02:32 UT over Russia's Perm Region, about 320 km. (200 miles) north of the Capital of Perm and not far from the town of Krasnovishersk (known for geological prospecting, discovery and exploitation of alluvial diamond deposits). 

Hardy observers who are up at dawn in this part of Russia (the Sun rises around 7:30 a.m. local time) will witness-should weather conditions permit-a striking sunrise eclipse with 87.4-percent of the Sun's diameter hidden by the passing New Moon.  The Sun will emerge dramatically from beyond the eastern horizon resembling a delicate crescent with its cusps pointed up and tilted slightly to the right. 

  • How Solar Eclipses Occur

The penumbra will continue to pass over the Arctic, and in the process crosses the International Date Line going eastbound; as a consequence the local date of the eclipse falls back a day, to March 18.  As it slides off the Earth's surface it ends up brushing northern and central Alaska, producing a small bite out of the Sun's upper right limb right around local sunset. 

So here is an oddity: an eclipse that ends on the day before it starts!

The eclipse ends when the penumbra leaves the Earth along the sunset terminator in the Arctic Ocean north of Point Barrow, at 04:25 GMT. Local circumstances of the eclipse, which have been computed for twelve specific localities, can be found in the table below.

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Place

Time Zone

First    Contact

Maximum Eclipse

Mag./Alt.

Last Contact

Rawalpindi

UT + 5 hr.

 (6:13 a.m.)

  6:44.3 a.m.

.659/5.4º

  7:39.9 a.m.

Perm

UT + 5 hr.

 (7:21 a.m.)

  7:26.1 a.m.

.873/0.6º

  8:22.3 a.m.

Calcutta

UT + 5½ hr.

  6:11.7 a.m.

  6:59.6 a.m.

.427/16.3º

  7:51.2 a.m.

New Delhi

UT + 5½ hr.

 (6:28 a.m.)

  7:06.7 a.m.

.573/7.5º

  8:00.8 a.m.

Colombo

UT + 6 hr.

 (6:44 a.m.)

  7:08.0 a.m.

.092/3.0º

  7:31.3 a.m.

Dhaka

UT + 6 hr.

  6:43.2 a.m.

  7:32.4 a.m.

.441/18.5º

  8:25.5 a.m.

Bangkok

UT + 7 hr.

  7:46.5 a.m.

  8:21.0 a.m.

.166/26.7º

  8:57.2 a.m.

Ulan Bator

UT + 8 hr.

  9:26.3 a.m.

10:27.0 a.m.

.615/30.2º

11:30.7 a.m.

Peking

UT + 8 hr.

  9:26.3 a.m.

10:22.4 a.m.

.486/40.6º

11:20.9 a.m.

Taipei

UT + 8 hr.

  9:25.7 a.m.

  9:58.6 a.m.

.108/49.7º

10:32.4 a.m.

Seoul

UT + 9 hr.

10:47.5 a.m.

11:31.3 a.m.

.196/48.5º

12:16.0 p.m.

Fairbanks

AKST*

  6:32.5 p.m.

  6:55.3 p.m.

.087/0.6º

((7:00 p.m))

Mag. = Magnitude: That fraction of the Sun's diameter that is covered by the Moon at maximum eclipse.

Times given correspond to the local time zone observed at each location.  All times are for the calendar date of March 19, except those for Fairbanks which are in italic and are valid for the previous day (March 18).  If First Contact occurs when the Sun is below the horizon, then the time of local sunrise is given in parenthesis instead; the eclipse will already be in progress at that time.  For Fairbanks, double parenthesis under the time of Last Contact is for the time of local sunset; the eclipse will still be in progress at that time.

* AKST = Alaskan Standard Time which is UT minus 9 hours.

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Joe Rao
Skywatching Columnist

Joe Rao is Space.com's skywatching columnist, as well as a veteran meteorologist and eclipse chaser who also serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmers' Almanac and other publications. Joe is an 8-time Emmy-nominated meteorologist who served the Putnam Valley region of New York for over 21 years. You can find him on Twitter and YouTube tracking lunar and solar eclipses, meteor showers and more. To find out Joe's latest project, visit him on Twitter.