sun
A solar eclipse. Earth would cover the Sun from his point of view.
to me i think we observe them to know which is going to happen or to notice when an eclipse is going to happen
Whoever is underneath it. If you are not directly underneath it, you will only see a partial eclipse.
When the moon passes through the earth's penumbra there is a partial eclipse of the moon for those on the side of the earth facing the moon. If it passes through the umbra, the eclipse is total.
Scott Carpenter was the fourth astronaut to orbit the earth.
The sun.
of the Sun
sun
That person would observe an eclipse of the sun.
an eclipse of the earth
A solar eclipse. Earth would cover the Sun from his point of view.
An astronaut on the Moon - or any of the Moon residents, starting about 30 years from now - would see a solar eclipse where we here on Earth see a lunar eclipse.
a solar eclipse of the sun. The two absorptions are complementary in that way.
to me i think we observe them to know which is going to happen or to notice when an eclipse is going to happen
It would look like a solar eclipse - Earth would cover the Sun.
Whoever is underneath it. If you are not directly underneath it, you will only see a partial eclipse.
A Solar Eclipse, depending where you are in relation to the shadow, depends on whether you see a total Eclipse or a partial.