Total
solar eclipse (1999, 11 august)
During a total solar eclipse, Earth's
moon blocks the sun - almost exactly. While the sun is about 400
times wider than the moon, it is also about 400 times farther
away and each appears to be half a degree or so in diameter. On
August 11, this remarkable coincidence in the apparent size of
two vastly different celestial bodies produced tantalizing solar
spectacles for denizens of Europe and Asia. For example,
prominences along the sun's limb peer around the moon's dark edge
in this dramatic picture of totality recorded as the lunar shadow
swept across Hungary. Subtle structures in the sun's inner corona
are also visible streaming beyond the silhouetted moon.
This total eclipse of the sun was the last to grace planet
Earth's skies for this millennium. Although four partial eclipses
will occur in the year 2000, the next total eclipse will not be
until 2001 June 21.
Credit & Copyright: Dominik Pasternak