Rare Midnight Solar Eclipse Caught In the Arctic
Tyketto writes "Wired Magazine has an article posted about a solar eclipse occurring overnight in the Arctic and Scandinavian regions over the night of June 1st and 2nd. They explain: 'During the Arctic summer, the sun dips low on the horizon but never sets. That means a solar eclipse is theoretically possible at any time. But this week's eclipse was the first visible from Scandinavia since 2000, and the deepest since 1985. The next one won't be for another 73 years.' NASA has the details, while NPR also has a small blurb on it, with Tromsø, Norway resident Rhys Jones adding some pictures to Flickr, and SpaceWeather putting together a gallery."
Is it news if it's something you can know about a long time before it happens?
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30 Days of Night takes place during the arctic Winter.
This is in the summer, thus the sun never really sets!
"Scandinavian Regions" - makes sense. But "Scandinavia"!? NOT A COUNTRY - you must just have invented that one. Or perhaps it is a Bushism? Mind you, only a fraction of the scandinavian regions are north of the artic cicle. It's a bit like claiming that the eclipse was seen in the USA even though it was only visible in parts of Alaska...
I thought I had a pretty good grasp of the mechanics of eclipses, but I never realized that solar eclipses would particularly occur at arctic latitudes more than others.
Rereading the sentence, I think it just means "possible at any time, as opposed to just during the day time, since day is 24 hours long". As opposed to my initial reading, "it makes solar eclipses particularly probable". That's not correct, right? And did anybody else read it that way, or am I just exposing my ignorance (again)?
Except that this wasn't at the just at the pole, but at the extreme northern end of the Scandinavian peninsula. It's a populated, relatively "southern" region in the sense that these regions still experience normal days and nights for most of the year.
When we're working at high latitudes and distant locations (which applies to both poles, though we don't go to that high latitudes. Yet.), we run our local time the same as the port that our major supply ships are dispatched from. It's purely arbitrary, but very useful.
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"