If the eclipse is visible from the place where you're born, then it means
that you're born during the night.
If the eclipse is not visible from the place where you're born, then it means
nothing at all.
If you mean compared to a lunar eclipse, then yes.
You can look straight at a luna eclipse. but solar during a solar eclipse you have to protect your eyes in some way (and i dont just mean sun glasses). there are many site you can go to that will give you different ways.
as the name implies, lunar eclipses are when the moon get in the sun's way during the day and things go dark for a short amount of time, whereas a solar eclipses is when the sun gets in the moons way, so i don't think both can occur simultaneously, unless you mean at different time of the day, if that's the case, then i believe nothing will happen, i heard you shouldn't look at the sun when a solar eclipse happens, it blinds you, it can damage your eyes too i heard
A lunar eclipse can occur multiple times a year, but the frequency can vary. On average, there are about two to four lunar eclipses each year. Lunar eclipses can be partial, total, or penumbral, with total eclipses being less common.
To some Christians, a lunar eclipse symbolised the wrath of God. In some cases a lunar eclipse has been conjoined with the crucifixion of Jesus, describing "a charred sky with an angry moon". A gobbled moon is associated with the "coming of Judgement Day" and ultimately, the apocalypse.
If you mean compared to a lunar eclipse, then yes.
Lunar refers to the moon (luna in Latin). Lunar is a modifier (as in lunar module, or lunar eclipse).
it is a shade like a lunar eclipse
well by you can't see the moon, I think you mean new moon. You have a new moon during a solar eclipse (moon is blocking the sun)
a red moon would mean there is a lunar eclipse.
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.
That is the correct spelling of "eclipse" (to obscure or surpass, or an obscuration). A primary use is to mean the Moon passing in front of the Sun (solar eclipse) or the Earth casting a shadow on the Moon (lunar eclipse).
You can look straight at a luna eclipse. but solar during a solar eclipse you have to protect your eyes in some way (and i dont just mean sun glasses). there are many site you can go to that will give you different ways.
as the name implies, lunar eclipses are when the moon get in the sun's way during the day and things go dark for a short amount of time, whereas a solar eclipses is when the sun gets in the moons way, so i don't think both can occur simultaneously, unless you mean at different time of the day, if that's the case, then i believe nothing will happen, i heard you shouldn't look at the sun when a solar eclipse happens, it blinds you, it can damage your eyes too i heard
An eclipse is the word used to describe an astronomical phenomenon in which the Sun, Earth and Moon happen to line up sufficiently for the Earth's shadow to fall on the Moon (a lunar eclipse) or the Moon's shadow to fall on the Earth (a solar eclipse). A lunar eclipse can be seen from half the Earth at once - the dark half. A solar eclipse has a more limited viewing area because the Moon is relatively small. Therefore although lunar and solar eclipses are equally frequent, it appears to anyone in a fixed geographical position that lunar eclipses are more frequent.
No, just as in a solar eclipse, the sun, earth and moon are in different positions depending on where you are on the earth. If we could all see it at the same time that would mean we would all be in the same exact spot on the earth.
A lunar eclipse can occur multiple times a year, but the frequency can vary. On average, there are about two to four lunar eclipses each year. Lunar eclipses can be partial, total, or penumbral, with total eclipses being less common.