by waterfall0007 » Thu Nov 07, 2013 12:14 pm
I question the statement:
"the Moon's shadow was moving at some 8,000 miles per hour across the Atlantic Ocean"
Looking in some other sources for the speed of an eclipse shadow:
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap040926.html
This shadow moved across the Earth at nearly 2000 kilometers per hour. (1243 mph)
http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2006/faq.php
Why do eclipse tracks move eastward even though the Earth rotates from west to east?
Because the Moon moves to the east in its orbit at 3,400 km/hour. Earth rotates to the east at 1,670 km/hr at the equator, so the lunar shadow moves to the east at 1,730 km/hr (1,074 mph) near the equator. You cannot keep up with the shadow of the eclipse unless you traveled at Mach 1.5.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0126702/eclipse.htm
The speed of the shadow at the equator is about 1706 km/hr (about 1060 mph); near the poles, where the speed of rotation is virtually zero, it is about 3380 km/hr (about 2100 mph).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse
The total eclipse lasts for only a maximum of a few minutes at any location, because the Moon's umbra moves eastward at over 1700 km/h. (1056 mph)
http://petapixel.com/2013/08/29/eclips- ... rom-space/
The shadow moves across the Earth at about 1,250 miles per hour, and only the people near the center of the shadow see a total eclipse.
I question the statement:
"the Moon's shadow was moving at some 8,000 miles per hour across the Atlantic Ocean"
Looking in some other sources for the speed of an eclipse shadow:
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap040926.html
This shadow moved across the Earth at nearly 2000 kilometers per hour. (1243 mph)
http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/2006/faq.php
Why do eclipse tracks move eastward even though the Earth rotates from west to east?
Because the Moon moves to the east in its orbit at 3,400 km/hour. Earth rotates to the east at 1,670 km/hr at the equator, so the lunar shadow moves to the east at 1,730 km/hr (1,074 mph) near the equator. You cannot keep up with the shadow of the eclipse unless you traveled at Mach 1.5.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C0126702/eclipse.htm
The speed of the shadow at the equator is about 1706 km/hr (about 1060 mph); near the poles, where the speed of rotation is virtually zero, it is about 3380 km/hr (about 2100 mph).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse
The total eclipse lasts for only a maximum of a few minutes at any location, because the Moon's umbra moves eastward at over 1700 km/h. (1056 mph)
http://petapixel.com/2013/08/29/eclips-photos-captured-from-space/
The shadow moves across the Earth at about 1,250 miles per hour, and only the people near the center of the shadow see a total eclipse.