Stargazing A rough calculation on the duration of lunar eclipse

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the duration of lunar eclipses, with calculations estimating 3.25 hours for a partial eclipse and 1.76 hours for a total eclipse. The calculations consider distances from the Earth to the Sun and Moon, as well as the Earth's radius and the Moon's orbital period. However, it is noted that the Moon does not usually pass through the densest part of the Earth's shadow, which could affect the actual duration. The provided calculations are acknowledged as approximations for the longest possible duration of a lunar eclipse. Overall, the thread emphasizes the importance of understanding the geometry involved in lunar eclipses.
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I guess many have watched the lunar eclipse last night
I was just thinking about the duration of a lunar eclipse on my way home

sun-to-earth = 1.5x10^8 km, moon-to-earth = 384400 km
R(Earth) = 6378 km, R(Sun) = 6.96x10^5 km, R(Moon) = 1378 km
Moon's period around Earth = 27.3 days

x / (x +1.5x10^8) = 6378 / 6.96x10^5
x = 1.39x10^6 km

y = x - 384400 = 1.00x10^6 km

z / 6378 = y / x
z = 4610 km
(I guess this is a good approximation for the figure is not to scale)

For partial eclipse:

384400 θ = 2z + 1378x2
θ = 0.0312 rad

t(partial) = θ /2π x 27.3 x 24 = 3.25 hours

For total eclipse:
384400 φ = 2z - 1378x2
φ = 0.0168 rad

t(total) = φ /2π x 27.3 x 24 = 1.76 hours

Please comment and make amendments if you find any mistakes in my calculations
 

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The calculations are fine, but you missed one thing: The moon need not (and typically does not) pass directly through the thickest part of the Earth's shadow.
 
russ_watters said:
The calculations are fine, but you missed one thing: The moon need not (and typically does not) pass directly through the thickest part of the Earth's shadow.

right, so this should be the longest duration of lunar eclipse
 
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