You are just a person. Being conceived during an eclipse will not affect you.
There are four different types of solar eclipse, namely Partial eclipse, Annular eclipse, Total Eclipse and Hybrid Eclipse. A partial solar eclipseoccurs when only part of the Sun is covered by the Moon which appears to take a "bite" out of the Sun.
You will see a partial eclipse if you are in the penumbra.
This is known as a Solar eclipse, as opposed to a Lunar Eclipse.
Every year has at least 4 and as many as 7 eclipses of one kind or another. As of November 2014, when the question is being answered, the next total solar eclipse will be on the 20th of March 2015. Like any eclipse, it will only be visible from some parts of the world. The next total Lunar eclipse will be on the 28th of September 2015, and again it will only be visible from some parts of the world.
That is called a lunar eclipse.
A total lunar 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
Exactly the opposite. An eclipse of the moon, whether partial,total, or any other kind, can only happen at FullMoon.
Total, and totally spectacular. Depending on your location
It depends on what kind of eclipse you are talking about. If it is a solar eclipse, no. The eclipse covers only part of the Earth, where the moon casts a shadow. and only a fairly small area will experience a total eclipse. A lunar eclipse is visible from anywhere that is facing the moon at the time.
There are four different types of solar eclipse, namely Partial eclipse, Annular eclipse, Total Eclipse and Hybrid Eclipse. A partial solar eclipseoccurs when only part of the Sun is covered by the Moon which appears to take a "bite" out of the Sun.
You will see a partial eclipse if you are in the penumbra.
The next eclipse in New York will be a total eclipse of the Moon, on December 21, 2010. It will (weather permitting!) be visible from anywhere in North America.
An annular eclipse is a special kind of eclipse, not seen anywhere on earth. Not even Texas, as grande as it is, is entitled to its own special kind of eclipse.
solar eclipse or a dertonium eclipse
There will be a total lunar eclipse visible from any point in North America (weather permitting!) on December 21, 2010.You can look up the details of any past or future eclipse on the NASA Eclipse Web Page; see the link below.