Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros Series

Saros Series 68

The periodicity and recurrence of solar (and lunar) eclipses is governed by the Saros cycle, a period of approximately 6,585.3 days (18 years 11 days 8 hours). When two eclipses are separated by a period of one Saros, they share a very similar geometry. The two eclipses occur at the same node[1] with the Moon at nearly the same distance from Earth and at the same time of year. Thus, the Saros is useful for organizing eclipses into families or series. Each series typically lasts 12 to 13 centuries and contains 70 or more eclipses. Every saros series begins with a number of partial eclipses near one of Earth's polar regions. The series will then produce several dozen central[2] eclipses before ending with a group of partial eclipses near the opposite pole.

Solar eclipses of Saros 68 all occur at the Moon’s descending node and the Moon moves northward with each eclipse. The series began with a partial eclipse in the southern hemisphere on -0626 Mar 16. The series ended with a partial eclipse in the northern hemisphere on 0654 Apr 22. The total duration of Saros series 68 is 1280.14 years. In summary:

                      First Eclipse = -0626 Mar 16   01:05:55 TD
                       Last Eclipse =  0654 Apr 22   17:13:12 TD

                      Duration of Saros  68  =  1280.14 Years

Saros 68 is composed of 72 solar eclipses as follows:

Solar Eclipses of Saros 68
Eclipse Type Symbol Number Percent
All Eclipses - 72100.0%
PartialP 30 41.7%
AnnularA 28 38.9%
TotalT 11 15.3%
Hybrid[3]H 3 4.2%

Umbral eclipses (annular, total and hybrid) can be further classified as either: 1) Central (two limits), 2) Central (one limit) or 3) Non-Central (one limit). The statistical distribution of these classes in Saros series 68 appears in the following table.

Umbral Eclipses of Saros 68
Classification Number Percent
All Umbral Eclipses 42100.0%
Central (two limits) 41 97.6%
Central (one limit) 0 0.0%
Non-Central (one limit) 1 2.4%

The following string illustrates the sequence of the 72 eclipses in Saros 68: 7P 28A 3H 11T 23P

The longest and shortest eclipses of Saros 68 as well as other eclipse extrema are listed below.

          Longest  Total  Solar Eclipse:    0131 Jun 12      Duration = 02m31s
         Shortest  Total  Solar Eclipse:    0239 Aug 16      Duration = 01m45s

          Longest Annular Solar Eclipse:   -0428 Jul 12      Duration = 07m07s
         Shortest Annular Solar Eclipse:   -0013 Mar 18      Duration = 00m27s

          Longest Hybrid  Solar Eclipse:    0041 Apr 19      Duration = 01m24s
         Shortest Hybrid  Solar Eclipse:    0005 Mar 28      Duration = 00m14s

          Largest Partial Solar Eclipse:    0257 Aug 26     Magnitude = 0.9969
         Smallest Partial Solar Eclipse:   -0626 Mar 16     Magnitude = 0.0422

Local circumstances at greatest eclipse[4] for every eclipse of Saros 68 are presented in the following catalog. The sequence number in the first column links to a global map showing regions of eclipse visibility. A detailed key and additional information about the catalog can be found at: Key to Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros Series.

For an animation showing how the eclipse path changes with each member of the series, see Saros 068 Animation.



Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros 68

                          TD of
Seq. Rel.    Calendar   Greatest          Luna  Ecl.           Ecl.                Sun  Sun  Path Central
Num. Num.      Date      Eclipse     ΔT   Num.  Type  Gamma    Mag.   Lat.   Long. Alt  Azm Width   Dur.
                                      s                                 °      °     °    °   km

 01  -34  -0626 Mar 16  01:05:55  18345 -32477   Pb  -1.5403  0.0422  71.6S  12.6W   0  255             
 02  -33  -0608 Mar 26  07:53:16  18058 -32254   P   -1.4781  0.1467  71.8S 129.6W   0  268             
 03  -32  -0590 Apr 06  14:34:18  17775 -32031   P   -1.4109  0.2605  71.7S 114.9E   0  282             
 04  -31  -0572 Apr 16  21:05:31  17497 -31808   P   -1.3355  0.3886  71.4S   2.1E   0  295             
 05  -30  -0554 Apr 28  03:33:20  17223 -31585   P   -1.2569  0.5225  70.9S 109.4W   0  308             
 06  -29  -0536 May 08  09:54:52  16954 -31362   P   -1.1725  0.6670  70.2S 141.1E   0  321             
 07  -28  -0518 May 19  16:14:51  16688 -31139   P   -1.0865  0.8144  69.3S  32.6E   0  333             
 08  -27  -0500 May 29  22:32:09  16427 -30916   A-  -0.9975  0.9670  68.4S  74.6W   0  344   -     -   
 09  -26  -0482 Jun 10  04:51:57  16170 -30693   A   -0.9098  0.9417  43.3S 175.2E  24  357  524  06m26s
 10  -25  -0464 Jun 20  11:13:11  15916 -30470   A   -0.8224  0.9439  32.0S  74.5E  34    2  365  06m51s

 11  -24  -0446 Jul 01  17:38:34  15666 -30247   A   -0.7375  0.9451  23.7S  25.6W  42    7  299  07m03s
 12  -23  -0428 Jul 12  00:09:36  15420 -30024   A   -0.6564  0.9456  17.3S 126.0W  49   11  264  07m07s
 13  -22  -0410 Jul 23  06:47:50  15178 -29801   A   -0.5804  0.9456  12.7S 132.4E  54   15  243  07m03s
 14  -21  -0392 Aug 02  13:34:16  14939 -29578   A   -0.5104  0.9452   9.7S  29.4E  59   19  232  06m56s
 15  -20  -0374 Aug 13  20:28:56  14704 -29355   A   -0.4465  0.9445   8.0S  75.4W  63   22  226  06m47s
 16  -19  -0356 Aug 24  03:34:30  14471 -29132   A   -0.3907  0.9437   7.7S 177.3E  67   25  224  06m39s
 17  -18  -0338 Sep 04  10:49:39  14243 -28909   A   -0.3420  0.9427   8.5S  67.6E  70   28  223  06m33s
 18  -17  -0320 Sep 14  18:15:18  14017 -28686   A   -0.3015  0.9418  10.3S  44.7W  72   29  224  06m29s
 19  -16  -0302 Sep 26  01:50:57  13794 -28463   A   -0.2686  0.9411  12.9S 159.6W  74   30  225  06m26s
 20  -15  -0284 Oct 06  09:37:04  13575 -28240   A   -0.2438  0.9406  16.0S  82.9E  76   30  226  06m25s

 21  -14  -0266 Oct 17  17:31:31  13358 -28017   A   -0.2251  0.9405  19.5S  36.6W  77   29  225  06m24s
 22  -13  -0248 Oct 28  01:33:12  13144 -27794   A   -0.2115  0.9408  23.1S 157.6W  78   28  224  06m21s
 23  -12  -0230 Nov 08  09:41:29  12933 -27571   A   -0.2028  0.9417  26.6S  80.1E  78   25  220  06m17s
 24  -11  -0212 Nov 18  17:55:03  12725 -27348   A   -0.1981  0.9431  29.7S  43.0W  78   22  214  06m10s
 25  -10  -0194 Nov 30  02:10:48  12519 -27125   A   -0.1943  0.9452  32.2S 166.2W  79   18  206  05m58s
 26  -09  -0176 Dec 10  10:28:09  12315 -26902   A   -0.1911  0.9479  33.9S  70.8E  79   13  195  05m43s
 27  -08  -0158 Dec 21  18:44:20  12114 -26679   A   -0.1862  0.9514  34.5S  51.6W  79    8  181  05m22s
 28  -07  -0139 Jan 01  02:59:33  11916 -26456   A   -0.1796  0.9554  34.0S 173.8W  79    2  166  04m57s
 29  -06  -0121 Jan 12  11:09:11  11719 -26233   A   -0.1679  0.9601  32.1S  65.1E  80  357  147  04m27s
 30  -05  -0103 Jan 22  19:15:23  11525 -26010   A   -0.1527  0.9652  29.1S  55.7W  81  353  127  03m53s

 31  -04  -0085 Feb 03  03:13:49  11333 -25787   A   -0.1302  0.9709  25.0S 175.3W  82  349  105  03m15s
 32  -03  -0067 Feb 13  11:06:56  11142 -25564   A   -0.1026  0.9769  20.0S  65.6E  84  346   83  02m35s
 33  -02  -0049 Feb 24  18:50:54  10954 -25341   A   -0.0666  0.9831  14.1S  52.0W  86  344   60  01m52s
 34  -01  -0031 Mar 07  02:29:23  10767 -25118   A   -0.0252  0.9895   7.7S 168.7W  89  343   37  01m09s
 35   00  -0013 Mar 18  09:59:34  10582 -24895   A    0.0238  0.9959   0.8S  76.2E  89  162   14  00m27s
 36   01   0005 Mar 28  17:23:34  10399 -24672   H    0.0789  1.0022   6.6N  37.5W  85  162    8  00m14s
 37   02   0023 Apr 09  00:41:09  10217 -24449   Hm   0.1404  1.0082  14.2N 149.8W  82  163   29  00m51s
 38   03   0041 Apr 19  07:54:46  10036 -24226   H    0.2062  1.0139  22.0N  99.2E  78  163   49  01m24s
 39   04   0059 Apr 30  15:04:34   9857 -24003   T    0.2762  1.0191  29.8N  10.6W  74  165   68  01m50s
 40   05   0077 May 10  22:11:37   9680 -23780   T    0.3493  1.0238  37.5N 119.0W  69  167   86  02m10s


Catalog of Solar Eclipse Saros 68

                          TD of
Seq. Rel.    Calendar   Greatest          Luna  Ecl.           Ecl.                Sun  Sun  Path Central
Num. Num.      Date      Eclipse     ΔT   Num.  Type  Gamma    Mag.   Lat.   Long. Alt  Azm Width   Dur.
                                      s                                 °      °     °    °   km

 41   06   0095 May 22  05:17:54   9503 -23557   T    0.4242  1.0277  45.0N 133.9E  65  170  104  02m22s
 42   07   0113 Jun 01  12:24:30   9327 -23334   T    0.5000  1.0310  52.1N  28.3E  60  175  121  02m29s
 43   08   0131 Jun 12  19:32:12   9153 -23111   T    0.5756  1.0335  58.6N  75.2W  55  181  139  02m31s
 44   09   0149 Jun 23  02:42:52   8979 -22888   T    0.6495  1.0352  64.1N 176.0W  49  191  156  02m29s
 45   10   0167 Jul 04  09:57:52   8806 -22665   T    0.7207  1.0361  68.2N  86.5E  44  205  176  02m24s
 46   11   0185 Jul 14  17:18:39   8634 -22442   T    0.7879  1.0362  70.2N   8.4W  38  222  198  02m17s
 47   12   0203 Jul 26  00:44:37   8463 -22219   T    0.8516  1.0355  70.3N 103.1W  31  240  229  02m09s
 48   13   0221 Aug 05  08:18:57   8292 -21996   T    0.9089  1.0339  68.8N 158.5E  24  256  276  01m58s
 49   14   0239 Aug 16  16:00:15   8121 -21773   T    0.9611  1.0313  66.4N  58.3E  15  270  392  01m45s
 50   15   0257 Aug 26  23:51:08   7951 -21550   P    1.0060  0.9969  61.3N  34.7W   0  292             

 51   16   0275 Sep 07  07:49:10   7782 -21327   P    1.0456  0.9222  61.0N 163.7W   0  284             
 52   17   0293 Sep 17  15:57:50   7612 -21104   P    1.0773  0.8624  60.9N  64.7E   0  275             
 53   18   0311 Sep 29  00:14:07   7443 -20881   P    1.1035  0.8130  60.9N  68.7W   0  266             
 54   19   0329 Oct 09  08:39:31   7273 -20658   P    1.1227  0.7769  61.0N 155.5E   0  256             
 55   20   0347 Oct 20  17:12:08   7104 -20435   P    1.1367  0.7504  61.4N  17.9E   0  247             
 56   21   0365 Oct 31  01:52:16   6934 -20212   P    1.1450  0.7347  61.9N 121.6W   0  238             
 57   22   0383 Nov 11  10:37:14   6765 -19989   P    1.1502  0.7249  62.5N  97.4E   0  228             
 58   23   0401 Nov 21  19:26:03   6595 -19766   P    1.1528  0.7201  63.3N  44.7W   0  219             
 59   24   0419 Dec 03  04:17:38   6424 -19543   P    1.1536  0.7187  64.2N 172.2E   0  209             
 60   25   0437 Dec 13  13:10:27   6253 -19320   P    1.1533  0.7193  65.1N  28.4E   0  199             

 61   26   0455 Dec 24  22:01:42   6082 -19097   P    1.1551  0.7163  66.2N 115.3W   0  188             
 62   27   0474 Jan 04  06:50:38   5909 -18874   P    1.1589  0.7095  67.3N 101.0E   0  177             
 63   28   0492 Jan 15  15:35:24   5736 -18651   P    1.1665  0.6957  68.3N  42.2W   0  165             
 64   29   0510 Jan 26  00:15:39   5563 -18428   P    1.1778  0.6746  69.3N 175.2E   0  153             
 65   30   0528 Feb 06  08:48:21   5388 -18205   P    1.1955  0.6417  70.2N  33.8E   0  141             
 66   31   0546 Feb 16  17:15:08   5212 -17982   P    1.2181  0.5989  70.9N 106.8W   0  128             
 67   32   0564 Feb 28  01:33:17   5033 -17759   P    1.2481  0.5419  71.5N 114.4E   0  114             
 68   33   0582 Mar 10  09:44:43   4854 -17536   P    1.2837  0.4737  71.8N  23.2W   0  101             
 69   34   0600 Mar 20  17:47:01   4675 -17313   P    1.3269  0.3907  71.8N 158.6W   0   87             
 70   35   0618 Apr 01  01:42:57   4531 -17090   P    1.3754  0.2969  71.6N  67.8E   0   73             

 71   36   0636 Apr 11  09:31:19   4387 -16867   P    1.4301  0.1909  71.2N  63.6W   0   60             
 72   37   0654 Apr 22  17:13:12   4235 -16644   Pe   1.4901  0.0743  70.6N 167.1E   0   47             


Footnotes

[1] The Moon's orbit is inclined about 5 degrees to Earth's orbit around the Sun. The points where the lunar orbit intersects the plane of Earth's orbit are known as the nodes. The Moon moves from south to north of Earth's orbit at the ascending node, and from north to south at the descending node.

[2]Central solar eclipses are eclipses in which the central axis of the Moon's shadow strikes the Earth's surface. All partial (penumbral) eclipses are non-central eclipses since the shadow axis misses Earth. However, umbral eclipses (total, annular and hybrid) may be either central (usually) or non-central (rarely).

[3]Hybrid eclipses are also known as annular/total eclipses. Such an eclipse is both total and annular along different sections of its umbral path. For more information, see Five Millennium Catalog of Hybrid Solar Eclipses .

[4]Greatest eclipse is defined as the instant when the axis of the Moon's shadow passes closest to the Earth's center. For total eclipses, the instant of greatest eclipse is virtually identical to the instants of greatest magnitude and greatest duration. However, for annular eclipses, the instant of greatest duration may occur at either the time of greatest eclipse or near the sunrise and sunset points of the eclipse path.


Calendar

The Gregorian calendar is used for all dates from 1582 Oct 15 onwards. Before that date, the Julian calendar is used. For more information on this topic, see Calendar Dates. The Julian calendar does not include the year 0. Thus the year 1 BCE is followed by the year 1 CE (See: BCE/CE Dating Conventions ). This is awkward for arithmetic calculations. Years in this catalog are numbered astronomically and include the year 0. Historians should note there is a difference of one year between astronomical dates and BCE dates. Thus, the astronomical year 0 corresponds to 1 BCE, and astronomical year -1 corresponds to 2 BCE, etc..


Predictions

The coordinates of the Sun used in these predictions are based on the VSOP87 theory [Bretagnon and Francou, 1988]. The Moon's coordinates are based on the ELP-2000/82 theory [Chapront-Touze and Chapront, 1983]. For more information, see: Solar and Lunar Ephemerides. The revised value used for the Moon's secular acceleration is n-dot = -25.858 arc-sec/cy*cy, as deduced from the Apollo lunar laser ranging experiment (Chapront, Chapront-Touze, and Francou, 2002).

The largest uncertainty in the eclipse predictions is caused by fluctuations in Earth's rotation due primarily to tidal friction of the Moon. The resultant drift in apparent clock time is expressed as ΔT and is determined as follows:

  1. pre-1950's: ΔT calculated from empirical fits to historical records derived by Morrison and Stephenson (2004)
  2. 1955-present: ΔT obtained from published observations
  3. future: ΔT is extrapolated from current values weighted by the long term trend from tidal effects

A series of polynomial expressions have been derived to simplify the evaluation of ΔT for any time from -1999 to +3000. The uncertainty in ΔT over this period can be estimated from scatter in the measurements.


Acknowledgments

Special thanks to Dan McGlaun for extracting the individual eclipse maps from the Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000 for use in this catalog and for preparing the Saros series animations from these maps.

The Besselian elements used in the predictions were kindly provided by Jean Meeus. All eclipse calculations are by Fred Espenak, and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy. Some of the information presented on this web site is based on data originally published in Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000

Permission is freely granted to reproduce this data when accompanied by an acknowledgment:

"Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak and Jean Meeus (NASA's GSFC)"


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2008 Mar 21