Gamma at a solar eclipse is related to the minimal value of the
elongation of the moon (its angular distance from the sun) as it would appear to a hypothetical observer at the centre of the earth, and to the distance of the moon from the earth. Gamma is the sine of the elongation times the lunar distance divided by the equatorial radius of the earth. Since the equatorial radius of the earth is 6378 km and the distance to the moon at new moon varies between about 356,353 and 406,720 km (see
lunar distance), gamma for an elongation of 1° is between 0.975 and 1.113. The
absolute value of gamma (denoted as ) distinguishes between different types of
solar eclipses that are seen on Earth. If the Earth were a perfect sphere, the maximum value of that a central eclipse The exact upper limiting value of |γ| for a partial eclipse depends on the
exact distance separating the earth from the moon. It is made of three parts: :\text{polar radius of earth/equatorial radius of earth}\approx 0.9966 :\text{radius of moon/equatorial radius of earth}\approx 0.2724 :\frac\text{radius of sun/distance to sun}\text{radius of earth/distance to moon}, varies between 0.2558 and 0.3018 This gives a range for |γ| of 1.525, when the sun is near and the moon far, to 1.571 in the opposite situation. Note that for a |γ| value of 1.55, a smaller moon (further away) gives a partial eclipse whereas a larger moon (closer to Earth) does not produce an eclipse. Eclipses cannot occur if the elongation (for a hypothetical observer at the centre of the earth or on the surface at the location where the moon is at the
zenith) is greater than 1.573° (corresponding to |γ|≈1.534, with both the sun and the moon at their minimum distances), whereas an eclipse will definitely occur if the elongation is below 1.40° (corresponding to |γ|≈1.561, with the sun and moon at their maximum distances). The
Solar eclipse of April 29, 2014, with a gamma of −0.99996, is an example of the special case of a non-central annular eclipse. The axis of the shadow cone barely missed Earth's south pole. Thus, no central line could be specified for the zone of annular visibility. The next non-central eclipse in 21st century is
total solar eclipse of April 9, 2043. == Gamma for lunar eclipses==