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ISLAMABAD: The lunar
eclipse will take place on November 24 (Monday) and will not
be visible in Pakistan.
A Met spokesman said on
Friday, the lunar eclipse will be visible from Southern Indian
Ocean and coast of Antarctica. The eclipse will begin at 01
hrs 46 min (PST) and will end at 05 hrs 52 min on November 24.
However, in between, the
total eclipse will begin at 03 hrs 19 min (PST) and end at 04
hours, 19 min. The greatest eclipse will occur in Wilkes Land
(Antarctica Continent).
The partial eclipse will be
visible from New Zealand, most of Australia, Southern
Argentina and Chile.
Scientists, tourists prepare for first Antarctic eclipse
A report from Sydney [Australia] says that hundreds of
scientists and tourists were making final preparations Friday
to become the first people ever to see a total solar eclipse
in Antarctica.
About 100 people have
boarded a former Soviet ice-breaker to see the only total
solar eclipse of the year while two Qantas 747 planes will
carry scientists and researchers to the spot. The moon will
mask the sun completely at 2249 GMT on November 23 over a
bleak spot in Antarctica, halfway between South Africa and New
Zealand.
Locales
The phenomenon will only be visible from a narrow stretch of
Antarctica and the adjacent ocean. "But only a few people and
lots of penguins will see it," said Jay Pasachoff, professor
of astronomy at Williams College in the United States. "We are
excited and from 40,000 feet we think we'll have a good chance
of seeing it," added Pasachoff, who is hoping to see his 37th
solar eclipse on a 14-hour return flight from Melbourne.
Pasachoff and his colleagues
hope to capture the entire image electronically using a new
lens specially built for the purpose. "We're very hopeful. It
depends on getting at the right place at the right time. The
navigation has been very carefully done and we hope the plane
works -- there are a lot of things that could go wrong so
we're nervous and excited."
Expeditions
Expeditions have also been mounted by Russia, Switzerland and
India, and workers at Maitri base (India), Novalazarevskaya
and Mirny (Russia), Zhongshan (China) and Davis and Mawson
(Australia) will also be close to the full eclipse. Partial
eclipses will also occur over most of Australia, except the
north-eastern Cape York, and New Zealand south of Wellington,
prompting a warning for the public to avoid looking directly
at the sun.
The cheapest fare for the
tourists aboard the Kapitan Khlebnikov ice-breaker, who will
spend a total of 28 days at sea after sailing from Port
Elizabeth two weeks ago, was 18,995 dollars.
Total eclipses happen about
once every 18 months, although they usually fall over the sea
or uninhabited areas. The next one, on March 29, 2006, will
traverse equatorial West Africa, the Sahara, Western
Mediterranean, Turkey and Russia.
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