"日食 (nisshoku)" is the Japanese word for solar eclipse.
Eclipse in Japanese is Nisshoku (knee-show-coo) - Japanese symbols - 日食
日食 Nisshoku
Kuro tsuki no kage ni or lunar eclipse is gesshoku solar eclipse is nisshoku
The words for 'solar eclipse' and 'lunar eclipse' are 日食 (nisshoku) and 月食 (gesshoku) in Japanese. The character 食 may be used to mean eclipse.
Lunar eclipse. Where the Moon is behind the Earth, thus eclipsing it.
A solar eclipse translates to : labores solis
They are pair of stars - hence binaries - which orbit one another. Strictly speaking, they orbit their centre of mass. Anyway, due to their motion each one will alternately eclipse the other - hence eclipsing.
Precisely by the eclipse - that's what an "eclipsing binary system" is all about. The idea is that one of the stars partially (or completely, in some cases) covers the other star; with the result that the combined brightness (as seen from Earth) gets less for some time.
Not precisely. The umbra is the TOTAL part of the shadow. In a total eclipse, where the eclipsing object is spherical, then the "inner" part of the shadow is the umbra, but in a partial eclipse, there IS NO umbra; just the "penumbra", the partial shadow.
yes you can cause i put on in my 93 eclipse and now i have a96 eclipse a i put a brand new 2.4 Japanese motor in it
Ulf Sinnerstad has written: 'Photoelectric observations of [zeta] Aurigae during the eclipse, 1963-1964' -- subject(s): Astronomical photometry, Eclipsing binaries