Saros 33

Panorama of Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33

Fred Espenak

Introduction

A lunar eclipse occurs whenever the Moon passes through Earth's shadow. At least two lunar eclipses and as many as five occur every year.

The periodicity and recurrence of lunar eclipses is governed by the Saros cycle, a period of approximately 6,585.3 days (18 years 11 days 8 hours). When two eclipses are separated by a period of one Saros, they share a very similar geometry. The two eclipses occur at the same node with the Moon at nearly the same distance from Earth and the same time of year due to a harmonic in three cycles of the Moon's orbit. Thus, the Saros is useful for organizing eclipses into families or series. Each series typically lasts 12 to 15 centuries and contains about 70 to 80 eclipses. Every saros series begins with a number of penumbral lunar eclipses. The series will then produce several dozen partial eclipses, followed by several dozen total eclipses. The later portion of the series produces another set of partial eclipses before ending with a final group of penumbral eclipses. The exact numbers vary from one series to the next, but the overall sequence remains the same. For more information, see Periodicity of Lunar Eclipses.

Panorama of Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33

A panorama of all lunar eclipses belonging to Saros 33 is presented here. Each figure shows the Moon's path with respect to Earth's penumbral and umbral shadows. Below the path is a map depicting the geographic region of visibility for the eclipse. The date and time are given for the instant of Greatest Eclipse. Every figure serves as a hyperlink to the EclipseWise Prime page for that eclipse with a larger figure and complete details for the eclipse. Visit the Key to Lunar Eclipse Figures for a detailed explanation of these diagrams. Near the bottom of this page are a series of hyperlinks for more on lunar eclipses.

The exeligmos is a period of three Saros cycles and is equal to approximately 54 years 33 days. Because it is nearly an integral number of days in length, two eclipses separated by 1 exeligmos (= 3 Saroses) not only share all the characterists of a Saros, but also take place in approximately the same geographic location.

The Saros panorama below is arranged in horizontal rows of 3 eclipses. So one eclipse to the left or right is a difference of 1 Saros cycle, and one eclipse above or below is a difference of 1 exeligmos. By scanning a column of the table, it reveals how the geographic visibility of eclipses separated by an exeligmos slowly changes.

  • Click on any figure to go directly to the EclipseWise Prime Page for more information, tables, diagrams and maps. Key to Lunar Eclipse Figures explains the features in these diagrams.

For more information on this series see Statistics for Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33 .

Panorama of Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33
Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1662 May 22

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1644 Jun 01

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1626 Jun 12

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1608 Jun 23

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1590 Jul 04

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1572 Jul 14

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1554 Jul 26

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-1536 Aug 05

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1518 Aug 16

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1500 Aug 27

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1482 Sep 07

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1464 Sep 17

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1446 Sep 29

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1428 Oct 09

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1410 Oct 20

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1392 Oct 31

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1374 Nov 11

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1356 Nov 21

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1338 Dec 03

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1320 Dec 13

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1302 Dec 24

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1283 Jan 04

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1265 Jan 15

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1247 Jan 26

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1229 Feb 06

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1211 Feb 16

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1193 Feb 28

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1175 Mar 10

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1157 Mar 21

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-1139 Apr 01

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1121 Apr 12

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1103 Apr 22

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1085 May 03

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1067 May 14

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1049 May 25

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1031 Jun 04

Total Lunar Eclipse
-1013 Jun 16

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0995 Jun 26

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0977 Jul 07

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0959 Jul 18

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0941 Jul 29

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0923 Aug 08

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0905 Aug 20

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0887 Aug 30

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0869 Sep 10

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0851 Sep 21

Total Lunar Eclipse
-0833 Oct 02

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0815 Oct 12

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0797 Oct 24

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0779 Nov 03

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0761 Nov 14

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0743 Nov 25

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0725 Dec 06

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0707 Dec 17

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0689 Dec 28

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0670 Jan 07

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0652 Jan 19

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0634 Jan 29

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0616 Feb 09

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0598 Feb 20

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0580 Mar 02

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0562 Mar 13

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0544 Mar 24

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0526 Apr 04

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0508 Apr 14

Partial Lunar Eclipse
-0490 Apr 26

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0472 May 06

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0454 May 17

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0436 May 27

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0418 Jun 08

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0400 Jun 18

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0382 Jun 29

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
-0364 Jul 10

Statistics for Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33

Lunar eclipses of Saros 33 all occur at the Moon’s descending node and the Moon moves northward with each eclipse. The series will begin with a penumbral eclipse near the southern edge of the penumbra on -1662 May 22. The series will end with a penumbral eclipse near the northern edge of the penumbra on -0364 Jul 10. The total duration of Saros series 33 is 1298.17 years.

Summary of Saros 33
First Eclipse -1662 May 22
Last Eclipse -0364 Jul 10
Series Duration 1298.17 Years
No. of Eclipses 73
Sequence 8N 22P 17T 19P 7N

Saros 33 is composed of 73 lunar eclipses as follows:

Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33
Eclipse Type Symbol Number Percent
All Eclipses - 73100.0%
PenumbralN 15 20.5%
PartialP 41 56.2%
TotalT 17 23.3%

The 73 lunar eclipses of Saros 33 occur in the order of 8N 22P 17T 19P 7N which corresponds to the following.

Sequence Order of Lunar Eclipses in Saros 33
Eclipse Type Symbol Number
Penumbral N 8
Partial P 22
Total T 17
Partial P 19
Penumbral N 7

The 73 eclipses in Saros 33 occur in the following order : 8N 22P 17T 19P 7N

The longest and shortest eclipses of Saros 33 as well as largest and smallest partial eclipses appear below.

Extreme Durations and Magnitudes of Lunar Eclipses of Saros 33
Extrema Type Date Duration Magnitude
Longest Total Lunar Eclipse -1013 Jun 1601h39m27s -
Shortest Total Lunar Eclipse -0833 Oct 0200h21m53s -
Longest Partial Lunar Eclipse -0815 Oct 1203h07m54s -
Shortest Partial Lunar Eclipse -1518 Aug 1600h42m21s -
Longest Penumbral Lunar Eclipse -0472 May 0604h15m06s -
Shortest Penumbral Lunar Eclipse -1662 May 2200h53m05s -
Largest Partial Lunar Eclipse -0815 Oct 12 - 0.99515
Smallest Partial Lunar Eclipse -1518 Aug 16 - 0.03448

Eclipse Publications

by Fred Espenak

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Calendar

The Gregorian calendar (also called the Western calendar) is internationally the most widely used civil calendar. It is named for Pope Gregory XIII, who introduced it in 1582. On this website, the Gregorian calendar is used for all calendar dates from 1582 Oct 15 onwards. Before that date, the Julian calendar is used. For more information on this topic, see Calendar Dates.

The Julian calendar does not include the year 0. Thus the year 1 BCE is followed by the year 1 CE (See: BCE/CE Dating Conventions). This is awkward for arithmetic calculations. Years in this catalog are numbered astronomically and include the year 0. Historians should note there is a difference of one year between astronomical dates and BCE dates. Thus, the astronomical year 0 corresponds to 1 BCE, and astronomical year -1 corresponds to 2 BCE, etc..

Eclipse Predictions

The eclipse predictions presented here were generated using the JPL DE406 solar and lunar ephemerides. The lunar coordinates have been calculated with respect to the Moon's Center of Mass.

The largest uncertainty in the eclipse predictions is caused by fluctuations in Earth's rotation due primarily to tidal friction of the Moon. The resultant drift in apparent clock time is expressed as ΔT and is determined as follows:

  1. pre-1950's: ΔT calculated from empirical fits to historical records derived by Morrison and Stephenson (2004)
  2. 1955-present: ΔT obtained from published observations
  3. future: ΔT is extrapolated from current values weighted by the long term trend from tidal effects

A series of polynomial expressions have been derived to simplify the evaluation of ΔT for any time from -2999 to +3000. The uncertainty in ΔT over this period can be estimated from scatter in the measurements.

Acknowledgments

Some of the content on this web site is based on the books Five Millennium Canon of Lunar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000 and Thousand Year Canon of Lunar Eclipses 1501 to 2500. All eclipse calculations are by Fred Espenak, and he assumes full responsibility for their accuracy.

Permission is granted to reproduce eclipse data when accompanied by a link to this page and an acknowledgment:

"Eclipse Predictions by Fred Espenak, www.EclipseWise.com"

The use of diagrams and maps is permitted provided that they are NOT altered (except for re-sizing) and the embedded credit line is NOT removed or covered.