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Partial solar eclipse on December 14 2020 (Antarctica)

partial solar eclipse December 14, 2020 (Antarctica)
Note: This image is here for illustrative purposes and does not represent the actual eclipse on this date.

The Moon information shown here applies to Vostok, Antarctica on Monday, December 14, 2020. (Local time Antarctica/Vostok)

Moonrise to moonset0h0m
Moonrise06:00
Moonset06:00
Distance to the center of the Sun147,248,924 km
Distance to the center of Earth366,526 km
Moon ilumination (at midnight)1.2%
Lunar phasewaning
Current zodiac sign the MoonSagittarius ♐
Moon age (days past new moon)28.5


Choose a country from the list to get relevant information:

According to international time UTC, a solar eclipse will occur on December 14, 2020 which will be visible in some parts of the world. The following shows the cities in Antarctica from which the eclipse could be visible (note that the following is a short list of some of the main cities, the eclipse may be visible from other cities not listed here). The date and local time of the event shown below.

CityEclipse visible?Phase
VostokNo-
Aboa StationYes Partial
Amundsen–Scott South Pole StationNo-
Capitán Arturo Prat StationYes Partial
Casey StationNo-
Concordia Research StationNo-
Davis StationNo-
Doctor SobralYes Partial
Elephant IslandYes Partial
Escudero StationYes Partial
General Belgrano StationYes Partial
General Bernado O’Higgins StationYes Partial
Great Wall StationYes Partial
Halley Research StationYes Partial
Maitri StationYes Partial
Mawson StationNo-
Mirny StationNo-
Neumayer–Station IIIYes Partial
Orcadas StationYes Partial
Palmer StationYes Partial
Peter I IslandNo-
San Martín StationYes Partial
Scott BaseNo-
Signy IslandYes Partial
Svea StationYes Partial
Teniente Jubany StationYes Partial
Tor StationYes Partial
Troll StationYes Partial
Wasa StationYes Partial
Zhongshan StationNo-

Information about this eclipse

partial solar eclipse This is an animated image which shows the shadow of the moon and its path on the map during the solar eclipse. Only the regions shaded by the moon may view this partial solar eclipse. The date and time displayed in this image are international date and time, therefore, they might not apply to your country. However, to know the date and exact time of partial solar eclipse in your country, you can see the table below. (Click on image to enlarge it).

Information of the Greatest Eclipse

Information of the Greatest Eclipse

This image shows the moments of external and internal contacts with the Moon's penumbra (and Moon's umbra when applicable) as well as the horizon and geocentric coordinates of the Sun and the Moon as well as the place and moment of the greatest eclipse. Some of the information from the image has been condensed in the following table. Please regard that the information in the following table applies only to the place of maximum eclipse, latitude 40.3S and longitude 67.9W, on 2020-12-14 at 16:14:39 (UT).

Date (UT)2020-12-14
Time (UT)16:14:39
Latitude40.3S
Longitude67.9W
Gamma-0.2939
Magnitude1.0254
Saros142
Sun alt.73
Sun azi.10
Path width90
Central Dur.02m10s

Eclipse schedule in Antarctica

The following table shows the schedule and phases of the partial solar eclipse of December 14, 2020 in Antarctica. For each city we have assigned a time zone which is very precise and it takes into account Daylight Saving Time (if applicable).

Sun Alt.: Excellent  Good  Low  Too low  

CityDetails
Event datePartial eclipse startsSun Alt.Total eclipse startsMax. eclipseSun Alt.AzimuthTotal eclipse endsEnds partial eclipseSun Alt.Mag.Obs.
Aboa Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:23:5231-22:48:1230293-23:12:20290.0842.9%
Capitán Arturo Prat Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:34:4651-22:32:1650346-23:29:27480.41530.2%
Doctor Sobral (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:25:5331-22:34:3731328-22:43:23310.0110.1%
Elephant Island (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:35:2551-22:33:5750343-23:31:59470.4331.8%
Escudero Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:34:5451-22:33:0050345-23:30:42480.42331.1%
General Belgrano Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:16:5933-22:38:5733320-23:00:51320.0662%
General Bernado O’Higgins Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:37:4250-22:33:5149343-23:29:34460.39628.3%
Great Wall Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:34:5551-22:32:5950345-23:30:39480.42331%
Halley Research Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:16:5634-22:43:5433308-23:10:40310.13.8%
Maitri Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:37:3024-22:58:1623264-23:18:51210.0672.1%
Neumayer–Station III (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:24:0432-22:55:4429284-23:26:53270.1456.5%
Orcadas Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:46:5951-22:47:0748320-23:45:37420.46535.5%
Palmer Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:35:3348-22:28:1948354-23:21:06470.3523.6%
San Martín Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:40:4045-22:26:2045359-23:12:07450.26415.7%
Signy Island (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:46:0352-22:46:2048321-23:45:02430.46635.6%
Svea Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:24:4431-22:49:2130291-23:13:47280.0873%
Teniente Jubany Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1421:35:1351-22:33:1750344-23:30:56470.42331%
Tor Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:33:2927-22:56:0625271-23:18:30230.0772.6%
Troll Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:31:4728-22:55:3626274-23:19:11240.0852.9%
Wasa Station (UTC 6)2020-12-1422:22:0433-22:50:5931292-23:19:34290.1194.8%

if present, (r) means the eclipse is in progress at sunrise, while (s) means the eclipse is in progress at sunset.

You can read the table above as follows: On December 14, 2020 in Aboa Station (UTC 6), an eclipse of type partial solar eclipse will start at 22:23:52, the maximum eclipse will occur at 22:48:12 when the Sun reaches an altitud of 30° and azymuth of 293°;this event will come to an end at 23:12:20 and will have a magnitud of 0.084 (the magnitude of an eclipse is the ratio of the apparent size of the Moon to the apparent size of the Sun during an eclipse) and an obscurity of 0.029 (the fraction of the Sun obscured).

In Aboa Station, for example, due to the small fraction of the Sun obscured by the Moon (2.9%), this eclipse will not be very obvious.

your city is not listed?

To obtain eclipse information for a particular city, you may load the interactive world map. In addition, the world map shows the path of totality and the coordinates of the greatest eclipse. (Due to some limitations, this map may sometimes not load)

Protect your eyes

Observers must be very careful while viewing the solar eclipse. Our advice is to never look at the Sun with the naked eye.For safety, you must always use sunglasses, telescopes and binoculars with special filters. Never use these equipments without protection as the Sun's ultraviolet and infrared light may harm your eyes or cause blindness if you look at the Sun directly.

(cc by 2.0) >National Park Service
(cc by-sa 2.0) >Gerwin Sturm

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Content last updated on 2016-01-23