They rarely ever happen, and it is cool to watch.
(They happen on the average 2.3 times every year,
same as lunar eclipses, but they're still cool to watch.)
The thing that makes them seem rarer is that a little over half
the planet sees every lunar eclipse. To see a solar eclipse,
though, you have to be in a very specific region, so for any given
spot you're likely to see a lot more lunar eclipses than solar ones.
On earth there are 2 eclipses, Lunar and Solar eclipses
Solar eclipses are more common than lunar eclipses.
'C' (the missing one) is the correct choice.
Solar and lunar eclipses
Solar eclipses are caused by the shadow of the Moon hitting the Earth. Solar eclipses happen on the Earth.
All eclipses are shadows. A solar eclipse is the Moon's shadow on the Earth. A lunar eclipse is the Earth's shadow on the Moon.
Five is the theoretical maximum number of solar eclipses in one calendar year; generally 4 partial eclipses and one total or annular eclipse. This configuration happens about every 200 years or so. Interestingly, there will be four solar eclipses in 2011; all will be partial eclipses, visible (if at all) only from polar regions. The last time there were five solar eclipses in a year was in 1935; the next time will be in 2206.
No, solar eclipses can be years apart.
Yes, these are called partial eclipses.
It can cause lunar eclipses, and solar eclipses.
Alan D. Fiala has written: 'Total solar eclipse of 11 June 1983' -- subject(s): Solar eclipses 'Total solar eclipse of 23 October 1976' -- subject(s): Solar eclipses 'Determination of the mass of Jupiter from a study of the motion of 57 mnemosyne' -- subject(s): Mass 'Total solar eclipse of 31 July 1981' -- subject(s): Solar eclipses 'Solar eclipses of 1977' -- subject(s): Solar eclipses
Solar and lunar. Eclipses of the sun and of the moon.