On average, we can expect two lunar eclipses and two solar eclipses in any year. 2010 will have four eclipses, right on the average.
There is only going to be one!
June 30, 2010
There were two solar eclipses in 2010, in January and in July.
The answer very much depends on the year. One calendar year has a minimum of four eclipses, which are two solar eclipses and two lunar eclipses. A year can have as many as seven eclipses. So each year is different.
There was 2 lunar eclipses in 2008.
none to 3 lunar eclipses a year
According to Kosmos Himmelsjahr 2010, it seems that the next solar eclipses are on Jan. 4, 2011, June 1, 2011, and July 1, 2011. All of these are partial eclipses - no total solar eclipses in 2011. You can view the catalog of all eclipses from 2000 BCE to 3000 AD on the NASA Eclipse Web Page, at the link below.
I don't really know but i think it comes out in 2010
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You can look up all the solar and lunar eclipses from 2000 BC to 3000 AD at the NASA Eclipse Web Page.
No. During the 5000-year period 2000 BCE to 3000 CE, there have been / will be a total of 12,064 lunar eclipses ... an average of about 2.4 per year. During the 10-year period 2001 to 2010, there are 24 lunar eclipses ... also 2.4 per year. There were 3 lunar eclipses in 2001, and 4 lunar eclipses in 2009. December 21, 2010 is/was the second lunar eclipse of 2010. So over the long term, you're looking at between 2 and 3 lunar eclipses every year.
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