No. The next solar eclipse will be a partial solar eclipse on June 1, 2011.
Solar eclipse
On average there are as many solar eclipses as there are lunar ones. But each lunar eclipse can be seen from half the Earth, while a solar eclipse can only be seen from a relatively small strip of the Earth's surface. So in any one place it seems that solar eclipses are rare.
The duration of Full Eclipse is 1.55 hours.
The duration of Days of Eclipse is 2.22 hours.
The total time of the eclipse was about 3.5 hours. However, the duration of the eclipse was 6 minutes 39 seconds if you were standing still along the centerline of the path of totality.
A few hours is.
The longest duration of a total eclipse is 7 minutes 29 seconds.
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There was no solar eclipse in December, 1992. So, I guess the answer would be "zero point zero seconds". http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEgoogle/SEgoogle1981.html
eclipse is of two kinds- solar eclipse and lunar eclipse
There are generally two solar eclipses and two lunar eclipses each year. A lunar eclipse happens when the shadow of the Earth falls on the Moon. Each lunar eclipse is visible from the entire night half of the Earth, so on average you will see one lunar eclipse per year, from wherever on Earth that you live. There are also two total solar eclipses per year, but the shadow of the Moon on the Earth is much smaller. So the average person will hardly ever see a solar eclipse, unless you travel to the place where the eclipse will happen. On average, you can expect a solar eclipse to happen where you live once every 58 years. If you would like to see when the next solar eclipse will happen where you live, the link below to the Solar Eclipse Calendar will be useful. To see all solar eclipses in the world, the "World Solar Eclipse" link will give you a map.
A solar eclipse.
the two kind of eclipse are solar eclipse and lonar eclipse..lonar and solar
the two kind of eclipse are solar eclipse and lonar eclipse..lonar and solar
solar eclipse
No. The next solar eclipse will be a partial solar eclipse on June 1, 2011.