Pulgasari
05-25-2021, 07:59 PM
When to Watch a Lunar Eclipse and Supermoon in Late Night Skies (https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/25/science/lunar-eclipse-blood-moon-how-to-watch.html)
People out west in the United States and in Australia and East Asia will have a good view of an event some call a “super blood moon.”
People on the West Coast of the United States, from Southern California up through Washington State, can expect the action to commence around 1:47 a.m. Pacific time on May 26.
In the beginning, the moon will enter only Earth’s outer shadow, called the penumbra. Any changes to the lunar surface will be subtle at first, Dr. Krupp said.
After sailing along over the next few hours, the moon will travel deeper into the shadow, at which point it will look as if something took a bite out of it. During this phase, it will begin turning reddish. This will start around 2:45 a.m. Pacific time.
At 4:11 a.m., the moon will fall completely within Earth’s inner umbral shadow and its full face will become a deep, dark red. The quirks of the moon’s orbit mean this total eclipse will be relatively short, lasting about 14 minutes and ending by 4:25 a.m. Pacific time. Some total lunar eclipses go for nearly an hour.
So there’s no eclipse visible from the East Coast or other parts of the United States?
Sorry to say, no.
As a consolation for those elsewhere in the country, the Griffith Observatory is hosting a live feed of the eclipse on its website from 1:45 a.m. to 5:50 a.m. (https://griffithobservatory.org/) Pacific. That means people in the Eastern time zone who wake up early enough can watch some of the show online.
Image
People out west in the United States and in Australia and East Asia will have a good view of an event some call a “super blood moon.”
People on the West Coast of the United States, from Southern California up through Washington State, can expect the action to commence around 1:47 a.m. Pacific time on May 26.
In the beginning, the moon will enter only Earth’s outer shadow, called the penumbra. Any changes to the lunar surface will be subtle at first, Dr. Krupp said.
After sailing along over the next few hours, the moon will travel deeper into the shadow, at which point it will look as if something took a bite out of it. During this phase, it will begin turning reddish. This will start around 2:45 a.m. Pacific time.
At 4:11 a.m., the moon will fall completely within Earth’s inner umbral shadow and its full face will become a deep, dark red. The quirks of the moon’s orbit mean this total eclipse will be relatively short, lasting about 14 minutes and ending by 4:25 a.m. Pacific time. Some total lunar eclipses go for nearly an hour.
So there’s no eclipse visible from the East Coast or other parts of the United States?
Sorry to say, no.
As a consolation for those elsewhere in the country, the Griffith Observatory is hosting a live feed of the eclipse on its website from 1:45 a.m. to 5:50 a.m. (https://griffithobservatory.org/) Pacific. That means people in the Eastern time zone who wake up early enough can watch some of the show online.
Image