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PIX4628444 Total Eclipse of Sun - 9/03/2016 - Total Eclipse of Sun of 9 March 2016 seen in Indonesia. Total solar eclipse seen from Indonesia. Composition of 24 eclipse images
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PIX4628341 Total Eclipse of Sun - 3/11/2013 - Total Solar Eclipse - November 3 2013 - Total Eclipse of Sun from November 3 2013 seen in Gabon. Total solar eclipse seen from Gabon. Composition of 66 eclipse images
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PIX4628157 Total Eclipse of Sun 22/07/2009 - Total Solar Eclipse - July 22 2009 - Total Sun Eclipse of 22 July 2009 seen in China, about fifty kilometers from Hangzhou city. Total Solar Eclipse seen from China near Hangzhou
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PIX4628150 Total Eclipse of Sun 22/07/2009 - Total Solar Eclipse - July 22 2009 - Total Sun Eclipse of 22 July 2009 seen in China, about fifty kilometers from Hangzhou city. Total Solar Eclipse seen from China near Hangzhou
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PIX4628267 Total Eclipse of Sun - Easter Island 11/07/2010 - Easter Island Total Solar Eclipse - July 11 2010 - Total Eclipse of Sun from 11 July 2010 seen on Easter Island. The total solar eclipse of 11 July 2010 seen in Easter Island
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PIX4628242 Total Eclipse of Sun - Easter Island 11/07/2010 - Easter Island Total Solar Eclipse - July 11 2010 - Total Eclipse of Sun from 11 July 2010 seen on Easter Island. The total solar eclipse of 11 July 2010 seen in Easter Island
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PIX4628238 Total Eclipse of Sun - Easter Island 11/07/2010 - Easter Island Total Solar Eclipse - July 11 2010 - Total Eclipse of Sun from 11 July 2010 seen on Easter Island. The total solar eclipse of 11 July 2010 seen in Easter Island
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PIX4617121 Mars eclipse the Sun - Illustration - Phobos Eclipse - Artwork - Eclipse of the Sun seen from Phobos, one of Mars's satellites. Solar eclipse seen from Phobos.
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PIX4580045 Eclipse totale de Soleil sur Terre vue de la Lune - Illustration - Total Eclipse of the Sun on Earth seen from the Moon - Illustration : L'eclipse totale de Soleil du 21 aout 2017 vue depuis la Lune. Earth as seen from the Moon during the total eclipse of august 21 2017
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PIX4628172 Total Eclipse de Soleil. 01/08/2008 - Total Solar Eclipse of 2008 august 01 - All phases of the total eclipse of Sun from August 1st 2008. One image every 5 minutes before and after Total Solar Eclipse of 2008 august 01 seen in Mongolia. The different phases are shown in this composite of images taken every 5 minutes
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LLM5996196 An eclipse of the Sun as seen from the Moon. Illustration from Hutchinson's Splendour of the Heavens (Hutchinson & Co, London, 1923).
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PIX4628125 Partial Eclipse of Soleil 01/08/2008 - Partial Solar Eclipse - August 1st 2008 - Partial Eclipse of Sun from 1st August 2008 seen in Reims in France where only 7% of the Sun was mask. Partial solar eclipse seen in Reims (France) where only 7% of the Sun was eclipsed
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PIX4628408 Eclipse de Soleil 20/03/2015 - Svalbard - Solar Eclipse - March 20 2015 - Svalbard - Total Eclipse of Sun of 20 March 2015 seen in the Svalbard archipelago. March 20 2015 total solar eclipse seen from the Svalbard archipelago east of northern Greenland
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PIX4628266 Total Eclipse of Sun - Easter Island 11/07/2010 - Easter Island Total Solar Eclipse - July 11 2010 - The different phases of the total eclipse of Sun from 11 July 2010 seen above the Moais of Easter Island. Multiple exposure sequence of the total solar eclipse of 11 July 2010 seen above moai statues in Easter Island
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PIX4583414 Total Eclipse of the Sun - August 21, 2017 - Shade of the Moon - Total eclipse of the Sun - August 21, 2017: Photo of the shadow of the Moon seen from the International Space Station (ISS). The shadow of the moon above United States seen from ISS. Viewing the eclipse from orbit were Nasa's Randy Bresnik, Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson, ESA (European Space Agency's) Paolo Nespoli, and Roscosmos' Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy. The space station crossed the path of the eclipse three times as it orbited above the continental United States at an altitude of 250 miles
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PIX4628413 Eclipse de Soleil 20/03/2015 - Svalbard - Solar Eclipse - March 20 2015 - Svalbard - Total Eclipse of Sun 20 March 2015 seen near Longyearbyen on the island of Spitzberg in the Svalbard archipelago. March 20 2015 total solar eclipse seen from Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen in the Svalbard archipelago east of northern Greenland
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PIX4583408 Total Eclipse of Sun - 21/08/2017 - Total Solar Eclipse - August 21 2017: Total Eclipse of Sun from 21 August 2017 seen in Ocean Lake, Wyoming, USA. Total solar eclipse on 2017 August 21 from Ocean Lake, Wyoming, USA
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PIX4628500 Total Eclipse of Sun - 21/08/2017 - Total Solar Eclipse in Wyoming - Total Eclipse of Sun from August 21, 2017 seen in Wyoming, USA. Wide angle view of the sky during the total solar eclipse of August 21 2017
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PIX4628553 Earth during a Total Solar Eclipse - Earth during a Total Solar Eclipse - Artist's view of the planet Earth during the night, seen above the Indian Ocean. The artificial lights of the cities appear. On the right, the part illuminated by the Sun shows an area of shadow caused by a total eclipse of the Sun. The perspective in this image is looking down on the Indian Ocean from an altitude of 25,000 miles. On the Earth's night side artificial lights clearly define the Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, and almost the entire African continent, while clouds obscure some of Europe and India. The alignment with the Moon and Sun is such that at this moment a total eclipse of the Sun is visible revealing the Sun's brilliant corona. However the area of totality, i.e., the darkest part of the Moon's shadow, is so small - - less than 200 miles wide - - that observers on the Earth would not be able to see this total eclipse. The only portion of the eclipse visible from the Earth is in the eastern Indian Ocean where the Moon's penumbra (partial shadow) falls, as can be seen in this image. The fact that total solar eclipses are visible at all is due in part to one of the most amazing coincidences in the Solar System: the Sun and the Moon appear from Earth to be about the same size in the sky. This is because the Sun's diameter is both 400 times that of the Moon's and is about 400 times as far away from the Earth. The result is that from the Earth, the Moon appears to just barely cover the Sun. If the Moon's diameter were reduced by just 6%, or if it were a little further away, it would never be large enough to ever completely cover the Sun
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PIX4628572 Total Eclipse of Sun - 21/08/2017 - Total Solar Eclipse above Castle Gardens in Wyoming - Total Eclipse of Sun from 21 August 2017 seen at Castle Gardens, Wyoming, USA. Wide angle view of the sky during the total solar eclipse of August 21 2017, above Castle Gardens in Wyoming
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PIX4628519 Total Eclipse of Sun - 21/08/2017 - Fisheye Total Solar Eclipse - Total Eclipse of Sun from August 21, 2017 seen in Wyoming, USA. A fisheye view of the sky during the total solar eclipse of August 21, 2017
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PIX4628296 Annular Eclipse of Sun 15 January 2010 - Myanmar Annular Solar Eclipse - Annular Eclipse of Sun 15 January 2010 seen from Bagan in Burma. Annular Solar Eclipse sequence wide - angle taken in Bagan, Myanmar on Jan. 15, 2010
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UIG5307911 Diagram depicting a total solar eclipse. A solar eclipse (as seen from Earth) is a type of eclipse that occurs when the Moon passes between the Sun and Earth, and when the Moon fully or partially blocks ('occults') the Sun. Dated 16th century.
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PIX4626297 Saturn seen from his satellite Japet - Saturn as seen from Iapetus - Artist's view of the surface of the satellite Japet and the planet Saturn eclipsing the Sun. Saturn as seen from Iapetus Saturn produces a “” diamond ring”” effect as it eclipses the sun in this perspective from the satellite Iapetus. Artist view
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PIX4583383 The Moon passes by the Sun - Moon and Sun seen by SDO: The Moon passes by the Sun from the SDO (Solar Dynamics Observatory) satellite on January 30, 2014 (10:30 EST). Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of the moon crossing in front of its view of the sun on Jan. 30, 2014, at 10:30 a.m. EST in 171 and 304 angstrom light. The two wavelengths are blended together.
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BL3261522 The Starry Messenger; or an interpretation of thatAuthor: Lilly, William / London, 1645Source/Shelfmark: 718.e.20.(6), title pageAccount of the strange appeareance of three suns in 1644.Image taken from The Starry Messenger; or an interpretation of that strange apparition of three suns seen in London, 19 November. 1644, being the birthday of King Charles. With an answer to an astrologicall judgement. upon his majesties present March.Originally published/produced in London, 1645.
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PIX4583376 The Moon passes by the Sun - Moon and Sun seen by SDO: The Moon passes by the Sun from the SDO (Solar Dynamics Observatory) satellite on January 30, 2014 (9:58 AM EST). Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of the moon crossing in front of its view of the sun on Jan. 30, 2014, at 9:58 a.m. EST in 171 and 304 angstrom light. The two wavelengths are blended together
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UIS5085300 Solar eclipse, 1905. Photograph of an original drawing, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. This drawing, made by W H Wesley, shows the appearance of the corona during the solar eclipse of 30 August 1905 as viewed from Sfase in Tunisia. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5085313 Solar eclipse, 1898. Photograph of an original drawing, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. This drawing, made by W H Wesley, shows the appearance of the corona during the solar eclipse of 22 January 1898 as viewed from Sahdol in India. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5085327 Solar eclipse, 1898. Photograph of an original drawing, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. This drawing, made by W H Wesley, shows the appearance of the corona during the solar eclipse of 18 May 1898 as viewed from Sumatra in Indonesia. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5085310 Solar eclipse, 1905. Photograph of an original drawing, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. This drawing, made by W H Wesley, shows the appearance of the corona during the solar eclipse of 30 August 1905 as viewed from Sfase in Tunisia. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5095463 Total solar eclipse, St Petersburg, Russia, 1912. Photograph showing a time-lapse sequence of seven images of the partial phases and totality seen during the solar eclipse of the 17 April 1912. H Stubington captured this view taken in the late afternoon by observing the event from St Petersburg in Russia. The photograph was achieved by the method of re-exposing the same portion of film at seven instances during the eclipse. With the camera stationary the view shows the relative movement of the Sun and the Moon as well as their joint motion from left to right due to the Earth's rotation. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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PIX4627297 Annular Eclipse of Sun - 30 - 05 - 1984 - Annular Eclipse of Sun - 30 - 05 - 1984 - The Sun's chromosphere and several prominences are seen on the left hand side of the solar disk. Red flaring on opposite side of the image is from the overexposed solar limb not completely covered by the moon
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UIS5096346 Great Eclipse of 1836', 1836 Print showing the partly obscured Sun during the annular solar eclipse of 1836. The lithograph titled 'Great Eclipse of 1836' was published in London by T McLean. The eclipse was not total, but rather annular so that a thin ring of the Sun's disc was seen at mid eclipse. Visible from central Scotland and Northern England the eclipse was viewed by Mr Francis Baily who saw beads of light appear just before and after the maximum stage of the eclipse. Known today as 'Baily's Beads' they are caused by sunlight shining through lunar valleys. Artistic licence has been used in this sketch as faces have been drawn on both the disc of the Sun and Moon. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5084310 Eclipse of the Sun, 7 August 1869. Lithographic colour print issued by Harvard College Observatory in 1876, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. Etienne Leopold Trouvelot (1827-1895), a French artist, made these sketches during the solar eclipse of 7 August 1869 from Shelbyville, Kentucky in the United States. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5084374 Great Eclipse of 1836', 1836. Print showing the partly obscured Sun during the annular solar eclipse of 1836. The lithograph titled 'Great Eclipse of 1836' was published in London by T McLean. The eclipse was not total, but rather annular so that a thin ring of the Sun's disc was seen at mid eclipse. Visible from central Scotland and Northern England the eclipse was viewed by Mr Francis Baily who saw beads of light appear just before and after the maximum stage of the eclipse. Known today as 'Baily's Beads' they are caused by sunlight shining through lunar valleys. Artistic licence has been used in this sketch as faces have been drawn on both the disc of the Sun and Moon. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5084298 Total eclipse of the Sun, 2 December 1870. Lithographic colour print issued by Harvard College Observatory in 1876, showing the corona around the Sun during a solar eclipse. The pearly and ghostly light is only seen during the brief period of totality when the Moon blocks the dazzlingly bright surface of the Sun. The corona forms the outer and very tenuous atmosphere of the Sun, an envelope of highly ionised gas, superheated to over a million degrees centigrade. Etienne Leopold Trouvelot (1827-1895), a French artist, made these sketches during the solar eclipse of 2 December 1870 from Jerez de la Frontera in Spain. ©SSPL/Science Museum
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UIS5072119 False colour photograph of the Sun and the Moon, taken from Skylab, 1970s. The image of the Sun clearly shows the corona, the very hot outer part of the solar atmosphere which consists of highly ionised gas superheated to temperatures in excess of 1 million degrees Celsius. It can be seen visually during a total solar eclipse as a halo or cloud of pearly white light. Phenomena such as solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CME) which occur in the corona emit massive amounts of radiation across the whole electromagnetic spectrum. This can cause radio blackouts on Earth, and can be dangerous to astronauts. Skylab, America's first space station launched in 1973, carried the Apollo Telescope Mount which contained eight instruments to study the Sun at various wavelengths. ©SSPL/NASA
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UIS5080163 Totally eclipsed sun, early morning 24 October 1995. The moon has moved in front of the sun and blocked its light. This allows the corona, the sun's outer atmosphere, to be seen along with solar flares or prominences which appear as red tongues of light. The eclipse was observed from Fatehpur Sikri, a ruined Mughal city near Accra in northern India. (The photograph was taken using a small reflecting telescope of 125mm aperture and a focal length of 500mm with a focal ratio of 14.5. The exposure was 1/30 second using 100 ISO Kodak Ektachrome slide film). ©SSPL/Kevin Johnson
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PIX4580036 Eclipse seen from the Moon - Illustration - Eclipse seen from the Moon - Illustration - Earth eclipse the Sun seen from the Moon. Illustration from 1981. Earth as seen from the Moon during an eclipse - Illustration, 1981
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Total de Resultados: 40

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