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         Eclipses:     more books (101)
  1. Eclipse Of Reason by Max Horkheimer, 2008-11-04
  2. Agents of Chaos II: Jedi Eclipse (Star Wars: The New Jedi Order, Book 5) by James Luceno, 2000-10-03
  3. Professional Eclipse 3 for Java Developers by Berthold Daum, 2004-11-10
  4. Eclipse by Nicholas Clee, 2010-04-01
  5. Incidental Eclipse by Joseph Donahue, 2003-01-01
  6. Eclipse Modeling Project: A Domain-Specific Language (DSL) Toolkit by Richard C. Gronback, 2009-03-16
  7. Eclipse Phase GM Screen & Adventure by Catalyst Game Labs, 2010-10
  8. Eclipse Web Tools Platform: Developing Java(TM) Web Applications by Naci Dai, Lawrence Mandel, et all 2007-05-31
  9. Lack (Eclipse Phase) by Rob Boyle, Davidson Cole, 2010-05-26
  10. Eclipse Corona (Song Called Youth) by John Shirley, 2000-11-20
  11. Eclipse Penumbra 2 (A Song Called Youth - Book Two) by John Shirley, 2000-05-01
  12. Mitsubishi&Diamond Star Performance TuningHP1496: A Hands-On Guide for Building the Ultimate High-Performance Mitsubishi Eclipse,Eagle Talon or Plymouth Laser, 1990-1999 Models by Keith Buglewicz, 2007-01-02
  13. The Bargain Bride (Signet Eclipse) by Barbara Metzger, 2009-11-03
  14. Me and My Baby View the Eclipse by Lee Smith, 1997-06-23

61. Wendy Carlos Eclipse Page
The Wendy Carlos Total Eclipse Page. One of the finest collections of color images of the sun s corona as seen during a total solar eclipse.
http://www.wendycarlos.com/eclipse.html
The Wendy Carlos
= Total Solar Eclipse Page =
Coronaphile

The '60/70's

Unique Event

The '80's
...
Venus Transit '04

And have you seen?:
Maps by Wendy

Music by Wendy

Note Trash your Cache
or hit Reload , to be sure you're getting the latest page versions. Confessions of a Coronaphile T otal solar Eclipses are a bigger part of my life than I'd like to admit (a touch of mindless obsession lurks nearby.) But for those who have witnessed this most spectacular of natural events, no words are capable of expressing the awe, the goose bumps, the thrill of the chase, the indelible memories wrought by one of these beauties. By the most unlikely odds, earth's moon is nearly the same angular size as the sun, when they are viewed from the surfacehalf a degree (it varies only a few percent during the year.) This permits the moon's orb, when it's path crosses the sun's, to just barely block out the intense light from the sun completely, fitting the solar disk just inside the moon's craggier one. When that happens, at least if you're lucky to be within the very narrow path the moon's shadow traces during the next few hours (or less), you will witness the day become near-night, like the deepest twilight. Sunset colors bathe the full horizon, while a gaping black hole gazes down at you from the inky sky, eye-like and surreal, surrounded by the solar

62. Total Solar Eclipse
Smithsonian photographer Carl Hansen describes his experiences photographing an eclipse of the sun. Hansen is presently chief of the Smithsonian Office of
http://photos.si.edu/eclipse/eclipse.html
Photographed From Panama
Total Solar Eclipse -
A Once in a Lifetime Experience
Smithsonian photographer Carl Hansen describes his experiences photographing an eclipse of the sun. Hansen is presently chief of the Smithsonian Office of Printing and Photographic Services Branch at the National Museum of Natural History
Text and Photographs
by Carl Hansen
On July 11, 1991, I had my first opportunity to view and photograph a total solar eclipse. At the time I was assigned to the Smithsonian Institution's Tropical Research Institute in Panama, Central America as the Chief of Photography. The day before the eclipse was scheduled to occur I drove out to the savanna region hoping to find a hilltop to camp on for the evening. I wanted to be in the Savanna (dry) region because I thought that would be the most likely region to be free of cloud cover. This is the dry, rocky hilltop we selected as our viewing sight. It is west of the town of Las Tablas in the Savanna region of Panama. It turned out to be one of the few, if not only sites, in Panama where there were no clouds at the time of totality.
==Smithsonian Photo #91-14775 We located the perfect hilltop quite a few miles west of the town of Las Tablas. The property owner gave us permission to camp on the rocky hilltop though he thought we were a bit strange, wanting to camp in such a dry exposed spot.

63. Eclipse -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on eclipse in astronomy, complete or partial obscuring of a celestial body by another. An eclipse occurs when three
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9106197/eclipse
document.writeln(''); document.writeln('Initializing application...'); Username Password Remember me Forgot your password? Search Site:
eclipse astronomy
Main
in astronomy, complete or partial obscuring of a celestial body by another. An eclipse occurs when three celestial objects become aligned. From the perspective of a person on Earth, the Sun is eclipsed when the Moon comes between it and Earth binary star move around each other in such a way that their orbital plane passes through or very near Earth, and each star periodically eclipses the other as seen from Earth. When the apparent size of the eclipsed body is much smaller than that of the eclipsing body, the phenomenon is known as an occultation . Examples are the disappearance of a star, nebula, or planet behind the Moon or the vanishing of a natural satellite or spacecraft behind some body of the solar system. A transit occurs when, as viewed from Earth or another point in space, a relatively small body passes across the disk of a larger body, usually the Sun or a planet, eclipsing only a very small area. Mercury and Venus , for example, periodically transit the Sun, and a natural satellite may transit its planet.

64. Black Sun Eclipse Homepage
Dr.Flescher s websites, Eric s Black Sun Eclipse, Storm Satori, Satori Astronomy What s New, eclipse sightings (ads etc), 2004 Lunar eclipse
http://members.aol.com/kcstarguy/blacksun/eclipse.htm
htmlAdWH('93212816', '728', '90'); Main Astronomy 2006 eclipse info video Eclipse pages 2001 eclipse 1998 Caribbean 2001 Africa 1973 eclipse 1999 eclipse trip 10 Myths of eclipses Eclipse accounts Eclipse activities Eclipse chasers Eclipse History Eclipse trips Eclipses coming up Eclipse preparation Eric's gallery pics Future eclipses General information Links eclipses links 99 Eclipse Journals accounts list Lunar eclipses Next eclipse Picture gallery Teacher page What's new Eclipse accounts 1972 eclipse 1973 eclipse 1979 eclipse 1998 eclipse 1999 eclipse 2001 eclipse Astronomy Asteroids Astrobiology Astronomy links Astronomy news Astro Topic links Astrosoftware Astropic week Astro News Astro Fun Astro cam Astro bio Astro Neos Astroactivities Astro Bloopers Books Comet pics by others Comets Comet pics Comet more Weight/age planets Dr.Flescher's websites Eric's Black Sun Eclipse Storm Satori Satori Astronomy E.O.A.S. (Earth, Oceans, Atmosphere and Space) Blog de also Winco travel eclipse tour Updated C reated (kcstarguy@aol.com) Buy Eclipse Photos/ Video Black Sun Store What's New eclipse sightings (ads etc) 2004 Lunar eclipse 2006 eclipses 2005 eclipses 2003 eclipses 2002 eclipses 2001 eclipses E clipse Webring Previous] [ Skip Prev] [ Skip -5] [ Next] [ ... Ringmaster This site is owned by Visitors:

65. NASA - Darkness Of The Eclipse A Call For Enlightenment
Eclipse as seen from the space station Image to right The shadow of the moon falls on Earth as seen from the International Space Station, 230 miles above
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition13/eclipse.html
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    Feature
    Text Size Darkness of the Eclipse a Call for Enlightenment A circle of darkness moving quickly across a lengthy swath of the Earth on Wednesday triggered fascination and reaction from people around the world. An astronaut about to embark on a six-month space mission said that fascination is a reason humans work hard to shed light on the unknown.
    The shadow of the moon moved in a northeasterly direction, beginning in Brazil and across the Atlantic, northern Africa, western China and Mongolia. Its longest totality duration was just over four minutes in western Libya, about 1,250 miles south of Tripoli a little after 5 a.m. EST.

66. 158 - Total Solar Eclipse Map (2001-2025) « Strange Maps
If you want to witness a total solar eclipse and you live in Europe, you’re out of luck until at least 2026. Unless you live in one of a few of Europe’s
http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2007/07/29/158-total-solar-eclipse-map-2001-202
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Strange Maps
July 29, 2007
158 - Total Solar Eclipse Map (2001-2025)
Filed under: 21st Century Map Astronomy Non-Fictional World Map If you want to witness a total solar eclipse and you live in Europe , you’re out of luck until at least 2026. Unless you live in one of a few of Europe’s geographical extremities (i.e. the Faeroe Islands, Spitsbergen, Nova Zembla, Abkhazia and other parts of eastern Georgia or the southern part of Russia), the astronomical phenomenon will pass you by. North Americans are in a bit more luck: on August 21, 2017, a solar eclipse will culminate in the sky close to Memphis, Tennessee. And on April 8, 2024, an eclipse will be visible in a band stretching from Maine to Mexico. South America will have three solar eclipses. On July 11, 2010 and again on July 2, 2019, eclipses will be visible across two different bands of Chile and Argentina. The third one will culminate over Patagonia on December 14, 2020. Oh, and there is a small strip of Brazil that witnessed the very beginning of an eclipse culminating faraway over the Libyan-Chadian border on March 29, 2006.

67. Eclipse Announces New Tools For PHP Developers
OTTAWA September 18, 2007 - The Eclipse Foundation today announced the availability of the 1.0 release of the Eclipse PHP Development Tools (PDT) project.
http://www.eclipse.org/org/press-release/20070918_pdtrelease.php
Eclipse
Eclipse Announces New Tools for PHP Developers
PDT 1.0 release - the first Eclipse project targeting PHP is now available for download
Press Release
OTTAWA - September 18, 2007 - The Eclipse Foundation today announced the availability of the 1.0 release of the Eclipse PHP Development Tools (PDT) project. Eclipse PDT is a set of tools and frameworks that enhance the productivity of developers using PHP, a popular, general-purpose dynamic language that is especially suited for development of web applications and web services. This is the first Eclipse project that targets the large PHP developer community. PHP developers using PDT will now be able to leverage the large ecosystem of over 1,400 Eclipse plugins. Many PHP developers use a number of different development languages, such as Java and C/C++. They also use development tools for tasks like source code management (SCM), testing, and profiling when building rich internet applications. PDT enables them to use Eclipse to integrate all of these tools into one single development environment. Key features in PDT 1.0 include:

68. Eclipse On Line
www.phys.uu.nl/~bassa/ 1k - eclipse occurs when the Moon s shadow falls on the Earth.
http://www.phys.uu.nl/~bassa/

69. Lesson Plan
This site has been designed to give your class an overview of astronomy and help them understand why a Total Solar Eclipse can happen.
http://www.kidseclipse.com/pages/a1b1c0d0.htm
This site has been designed to give your class an overview of astronomy and help them understand why a Total Solar Eclipse can happen.
Each section leads with a simple question which is answered through the use of words, pictures, animations and activities. Each section requires approximately 5 minutes, each activity varies.
How do the Sun, the Earth, and the Moon move?

This section explains the solar system and its movement with animation and fun.
What is an eclipse?

This section, with its activity using an orange, grape and flashlight, is a simple way to show how an eclipse happens.
What is a total solar eclipse?

A total solar eclipse can happen only because of the unique size and distance measurements of our Moon and Sun. By using a beach ball and a tennis ball (or dodge ball and softball), this activity gives the opportunity to spell out our unique solar system.
What happens during a total solar eclipse?

With simple photographs, we see the various stages of a total solar eclipse.
What are the safety facts?

70. Google Earth Blog: Solar Eclipse Paths In Google Earth
Total solar eclipse March 29 in Google Earth Recently someone contacted me with some interesting Google Earth files which show solar eclipse paths (where
http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2006/01/solar_eclipse_p.html
Home About Basics Links ... Main
January 12, 2006
Solar Eclipse Paths in Google Earth
Recently someone contacted me with some interesting Google Earth files which show solar eclipse paths (where the eclipse is viewable on the ground), both total and annular (for information on solar eclipses see this Wikipedia article ). His web site contains a few historical ones dating back to 1961, but is mostly focused on near-term (those in this century) future eclipses. The next total solar eclipse is only 76 days away on 29-March-2006 and crosses over a lot of land mass from southern Russia, across Kazahkstan, Turkey, and right across north-central Africa. Here is the 29-March-2006 Total Eclipse path for Google Earth. Now you can plan your trip with Google Earth for the best location to view the Eclipse, find an airport, make hotel arrangements, figure out which geocaches are nearby, etc. Thanks to Xavier Jubier for creating the GE files and informing me about them. Also, his data came from Fred Espenak, at NASA/GSFC By the way, last October someone at the

71. Sheridan Williams
Sheridan Williams. Solar Eclipse Web Site. Click on picture to enter.
http://www.clocktower.demon.co.uk/eclipse99/
Sheridan Williams Solar Eclipse Web Site
Click on picture to enter

72. 2003 Total Solar Eclipse - Antarctica - Fred Bruenjes
Information about the 2003 Total Solar Eclipse in Antarctica.
http://www.moonglow.net/eclipse/2003nov23/index.html

Perseids!

Eclipse

Launch!

Eclipses
... Observatory Satellite image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Land
Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC. Taken October 29, 2002.
The 2003 Antarctic Total Solar Eclipse
November 23, 2003
by Fred Bruenjes
Introduction
My hobby of chasing solar eclipses to remote corners of the globe continued this fall with a trip to Antarctica. I was part of the Astronomical Tours expedition to the Schirmacher Hills area, on the Princess Astrid Coast in Dronning (Queen) Maud Land, Antarctica. This area is near the coast of the continent, south of South Africa. What is a total solar eclipse? Well, through an amazing coincidence in geometry, every few years the Moon blocks out the Sun creating a solar eclipse. The Sun is 400 times the size of the Moon, and 400 times as distant, so they appear to be the same size when viewed from Earth. When the orbit of the Moon takes it between the Sun and the Earth, the shadow of the Moon is cast upon the Earth. If the Moon is close enough to the Earth, someone located near the middle of that shadow will see the Moon exactly block out the Sun in a spectacular show. This is a "Total Solar Eclipse", arguably the most spectacular show in astronomy. Total Solar Eclipses (TSEs) happen every few years, in strips laid across seemingly random parts of the globe. Click here for a map of TSEs during 2001-2025, courtesy Fred Espenak of NASA.

73. Total Eclipse 2006 Turkey
International Meeting During The Total Solar Eclipse 2006 Click here to see total solar eclipse photos taken by participants.
http://eclipse2006-conf.ankara.edu.tr/
Last updated: 17 April 2007 "International Meeting During The Total Solar Eclipse 2006"
A great possibility to attend a meeting while preparing for observations and experiments and to do it right on the spot, on the line of totality
Home
Rationale Announcements Committees ...
University
Contact Information e-mail: eclipse2006-conf@ankara.edu.tr
fax no : +90 312 223 23 95
web : http://eclipse2006-conf.ankara.edu.tr/ Deadlines Early Registration: 30 September 2005
Late Registration : 31 January 2006
Abstracts : 31 January 2006
Manuscripts : 31 May 2006 The proceedings of the meeting is at printing stage by ASP Conference Series
(Volume no: 370).
Click here to see total solar eclipse photos taken by participants...
Organising Institutions Ankara University Observatory (AUO) Observatory (CUO) TUBITAK-Turkish National ... Observatory (TUG) Sponsors TUBITAK-Turkish Scientific and Technical Research Council UNESCO-ROSTE Regional Bureau for Science in Europe

74. Interactive Eclipse-Maps For Every Solar Eclipse In The 20th And 21th Century
The outline of the curves show the area of visibility of the eclipse. However, the eclipse will be only partial, except for the thin black line,
http://eclipse.astroinfo.org/solar/activemaps.html
Finsternisse home Astrolexikon Finsternisse ... Deutschland
WWW Site Sonnenfinsternisse
Totale Sonnenfinsternis

Erlebnis Sonnenfinsternis

Die Beobachtungen

Astronomie
...
Sicherheit

Berichte, Bilder Finsternisse 2008
7. Februar 2008

1. August 2008

Finsternisse 2007
... 26. Februar 1998 Karten Karten 1999 Europa Interaktiv, 1900 - 2100 Finsternisrechner Ihre Daten Simulation Globale Daten Zentrallinie ... Grenzlinien Tabellen 1700 - 2100 International Deutschland, A, CH Transits Venustransit Merkurtransit Mondfinsternisse Entstehung Fototipps 21. Februar 2008 16. August 2008 ... 9. Januar 2001 Finsternisrechner Lokale Daten Simulation Globale Daten Schattenspiele Jupitermonde Sternbedeckungen Planetenbedeckungen Saturnbedeckung ... Planeten-Konjunktionen Tipps Finsternis-Links Eclipse-FAQ Wetter Impressum Sitemap Werbung auf astro!nfo Ihr Feedback Werbung Kredite günstig: Kredit ohne Schufa Kredite www.astronomie.info 45873650 Seiten seit 1.1.2004 var javascript_version = 1.0; Click on a location on the map and see the solar eclipse at this location!
Interactive Maps for all Solar Eclipses in the 20th and 21th Century
Further Content: Special maps for the World Europe View the region covered by the solar eclipse on: 22 November 1900 18 May 1901 11 November 1901 08 April 1902 07 May 1902 31 October 1902 29 March 1903 21 September 1903 17 March 1904 09 September 1904 06 March 1905 30 August 1905 23 February 1906 21 July 1906 20 August 1906 14 January 1907 10 July 1907 03 January 1908 28 June 1908 23 December 1908 17 June 1909 12 December 1909 09 May 1910 02 November 1910 28 April 1911 22 October 1911

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