Copyright:
Stephan Heinsius
(Eclipseland)
原文:
What would it look like to fly through a total eclipse of the Sun? On a typical place on Earth in the path of the dark shadow of the Moon during a total eclipse, an observer would see the Moon cross the face of the Sun, completely blocking it for a few minutes. A particularly clear view of the darkness created on Earth during last month’s total solar eclipse was captured by an aircraft flying through the Moon’s umbral shadow. One second of time in the featured time-lapse video corresponds to about one minute of real time. The Moon’s shadow comes in from the right and leaves on the left, all while locations on Earth outside the umbral shadow — over 100 kilometers away — remain partly sunlit. During the next solar eclipse in mid-September, the Moon will, at most, block only part of the Sun.
中文翻譯:
在一次日全食中,從地球上某個位於月球陰影路徑的地方觀察,會見到月亮完全遮住了太陽,這個過程持續幾分鐘。最近一次的日全食過程中,某架飛機從月球的本影中穿過,捕捉到了一個特別清晰的畫面。時間的快照視頻中,每一秒鐘的畫面對應著現實中的約一分鐘。月球的陰影從右邊進來,從左邊離開,而在距離本影超過100公里的地方,地球上的其他地點仍然部分被陽光照亮。在下個月的9月中旬,月亮最多只會遮擋部分的太陽。
#日全食 #總日食 #月球陰影 #宇宙奇觀 #天文學 #太陽 #飛行體驗 #天文探索 #探索宇宙 #自然之美
來源:NASA每日圖片