- Source: September 2090 lunar eclipse
A total lunar eclipse will take place on September 8, 2090.
This is the final (last) total lunar eclipse of Lunar Saros 129. The next 21 eclipses are all partial events, starting with the September 20, 2108 partial lunar eclipse.
Visibility
It will be completely visible over Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia, seen rising over the Americas on the evening of Friday, September 8, 2090 and setting over Asia and Australia on the morning of Saturday, September 9, 2090.
Related lunar eclipses
= Saros series
=Lunar saros series 129, repeating every 18 years and 11 days, containing 71 events, has 11 total lunar eclipses. The first total lunar eclipse of this series was on May 24, 1910, and last will be on September 8, 2090. The longest occurrence of this series was on July 16, 2000 when totality lasted 106 minutes and 24.6 seconds.
It last occurred on August 18, 2054 and will next occur on September 20, 2108.
This is the 42nd member of Lunar Saros 129, and the last total eclipse. The previous event is the August 2072 lunar eclipse. Lunar Saros 129 contains 11 total lunar eclipses between 1910 and 2090. Solar Saros 136 interleaves with this lunar saros with an event occurring every 9 years 5 days alternating between each saros series.
= Half-Saros cycle
=A lunar eclipse will be preceded and followed by solar eclipses by 9 years and 5.5 days (a half saros). This lunar eclipse is related to two total solar eclipses of Solar Saros 136.
See also
List of lunar eclipses and List of 21st-century lunar eclipses
Notes
External links
2090 Sep 08 chart Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- September 2090 lunar eclipse
- June 1946 lunar eclipse
- July 2018 lunar eclipse
- August 2036 lunar eclipse
- July 2000 lunar eclipse
- July 1982 lunar eclipse
- Solar eclipse of September 23, 2090
- August 2072 lunar eclipse
- November 2003 lunar eclipse
- June 1964 lunar eclipse