occultation
ok-ul-TAY-shun
The hiding of one celestial body behind another — a star disappearing behind the Moon, a moon slipping behind a planet. An eclipse is a special case of occultation, but the word applies more broadly: any time one object in the sky passes in front of another, blocking it from view. Occultations are instantaneous — a star winks out in a fraction of a second as the Moon's limb crosses it — and astronomers use the precise timing to measure the positions and sizes of objects with extraordinary accuracy.
Etymology
Latin occultatio, a hiding, a concealment, from occultare, to hide, to conceal. The same root gives us occult — the hidden. The star is hidden.
*
Surprise Me With a Word