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The total solar eclipse and Baily's
Beads of solar eclipse are seen in Jiujiang, east China's Jiangxi
Province, in this combo photograph taken respectively at 9:29:54, 9:30:04,
9:30:25 and 9:30:37 (from L to R) a.m. on July 22, 2009.(Xinhua/Zhang
Wu) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Photo gallery:
Solar eclipse seen in
China
BEIJING, July 22 (Xinhua) -- A total solar eclipse
brought darkness to many places along the upper reaches of China's longest
river, the Yangtze, at 9:15 a.m. Wednesday.
The full solar blackout could be seen at 9:30 a.m.
from an observatory site in Anji, east China's Zhejiang Province, a site chosen
by Jay Pasachoff, head of the Solar Eclipse Working Group of the International
Astronomical Union (IAU), and more than 200 astronomers from more than 20
countries.
"The weather is clear enough to observe the complete
duration of the solar eclipse here in Anji. However, the image of the eclipse
may not be ideal for professional astronomical analysis, because of the
interference of some cloud," said Zhang Hongqi, chief researcher of the National
Astronomical Observatories.
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Astronomy enthusiasts watch a live
broadcast of the solar eclipse in Shanghai, China, July 22, 2009. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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He explained that the cloud could affect data
collected by astronomical telescope.
"The sky was not perfect," said Pasachoff. "We were
very lucky that the clouds got lighter as totality approached...the corona was
in the clear area in the sky, so we all got a good deal. It was clearer than
other parts in the sky."
"It is the longest solar eclipse that I have watched,
" said Martin Stirland, a Briton, who was in a crowd of 2,000 eclipse-watchers
in Anji.
He said it was the fourth time that he experienced a
full solar eclipse, and it was the most beautiful.
The total blackout lasted 5 minutes 38 seconds in
Anji.
Many Chinese cities, such as Chongqing and Wuhan in
west and central China, turned off many street lights to allow the public to
better observe the total eclipse, which lasted about four minutes there.
"This total solar eclipse is just fantastic, you just
can't get that feeling from the video or pictures," said Paul Maley, from the
U.S. NASA Johnson Space Center Astronomical Society, who watched the eclipse in
Wuhan, capital of Hubei Province.
He was accompanied by 40 astronomic amateurs from the
United States, Germany and New Zealand to Wuhan for the observation.
The July 22 eclipse is the longest total solar
eclipse of the 21st century. It passed across China from Tibet to the coastal
city of Shanghai, where 300 million people live.
Millions of eclipse-watchers thronged to the banks of
the Yellow and Yangtze rivers in northwestern Lanzhou and central Wuhan cities
early Wednesday to observe the spectacle.
A partial solar eclipse started at 8:01:27 a.m. in
Cona County, Tibet in southwest China, according to an observatory of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
The county was one of the first places in the country
to see the eclipse.
However, the view at Cona was blocked by clouds,
according to sources from the CAS Purple Mountain Observatory based in Nanjing,
eastern Jiangsu Province.
Cona is 500 km south of Lhasa, Tibet's capital. The
sun was covered by clouds in Lhasa as well on Wednesday.
"It is such a pity. I planned to watch the phenomenon
in the plateau city of Lhasa," said Zhou Zheng, a tourist from Beijing.
Instead he saw many Buddhism believers chanting
scriptures and walking clockwise around the Potala Palace, since the eclipse
coincided with one of the sacred days for the ritual.
The weather in many Chinese cities along the full
solar eclipse path was not favorable for observing the phenomenon, according to
the China Meteorological Administration's forecast at 8 a.m.
Zhu Jin, head of the Beijing Astronomical
Observatory, said although overcast conditions blocked the view along the lower
stream of the Yangtze, the shadow of the moon was visible moving behind the
clouds.
It was raining in Shanghai when the total eclipse
occurred at 9:35 a.m. The city put extra police on streets, and more than 30
police vessels patrolled the coast.
Only street lamps were left on, as the city turned
off all landscape lighting to allow people to watch the solar eclipse.
It was forecast that the Zhoushan Islands of eastern
Zhejiang Province would see the longest total eclipse lasting 6 minutes 9
seconds.
However, the view at Zhoushan was completely blocked
by clouds.
Despite the unfavorable weather, 2,000 Buddhist monks
and tourists joined a mass prayer for peace and stability in front of a statue
of the Goddess of Mercy in Putuo Mountain, a Buddhist resort on the islands.
In Beijing, which was enveloped in mist Wednesday,
some 200 astronomy watchers queued in front of the Beijing Astronomical
Observatory at 6:30 a.m.. Staff at the observatory said the eclipse had sparked
interest in astronomy.
Yang Jing, a high-school student from Urumqi,
northwest China's Xinjiang, was excited to enjoy a clear partial eclipse view
Wednesday.
"I didn't expect such a big crowd to watch the
eclipse, since there haven't been any public gatherings since the July 5
unrest," she said.
A relative of Yang's was injured in the violence,
which left 197 dead and more than 1,600 injured.
"On the Nanhu Square, the observation was organized.
We had astronomical experts to explain, as the moon's shadow crossed the sun,"
she said.
China holds one of the world's earliest celestial
records of a solar eclipse. The ancient Shangshu, or Book of Documents, recorded
a story of a solar eclipse from the Xia Dynasty (21st-16th centuries BC).
Chinese emperors were known to take advice from astrologists when eclipses
occurred.
In ancient China, people ran and banged basins or
gongs in an attempt to scare away the "celestial dog," which was believed to be
an evil swallowing the sun.
However, in modern China, the solar eclipse means a
tourist boom.
All hotels at sites believed to have good views of
the eclipse were booked out as early as two years ago. On Wednesday, public
squares and lakes in east China were crowded with people watching the heavens.
July 22: Longest total solar eclipse in 500
years