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Winifred
12-19-2010, 04:09 AM
On the night of Dec. 20 to Dec. 21,if the weather is clear, favorably placed skywatchers will have a view of one of nature's most beautiful spectacles: a total eclipse of the moon.

Unlike a total eclipse of the sun, which is only visible to those in the path of totality, the passage of the moon through the Earth's shadow is equally visible from all places within the hemisphere where the moon is above the horizon.

The total phase of the upcoming event will be visible across all of North and South America, as well as the northern and western part of Europe, and a small part of northeast Asia, including Korea and much of Japan. Totality will also be visible in its entirety from the North Island of New Zealand and Hawaii — a potential viewing audience of about 1.5 billion people. This will be the first opportunity from any place on earth to see the moon undergo a total eclipse in 34 months.

The eclipse will begin at or around 6:15 UT (on Dec. 21) which corresponds to 1:15 a.m. Eastern Time or 10:15 p.m. Pacific Time (on Dec. 20).The moon is expected to take 3 hours and 28 minutes to pass completely through the umbra.

The total phase of the eclipse will last 72 minutes beginning at 7:41 UT (on Dec. 21), corresponding to 2:41 a.m. EST or 11:41 p.m. PST (on Dec. 20).

At the moment of mid-totality (8:17 UT/3:17 a.m. EST/12:17 a.m. PST), the moon will stand directly overhead from a point in the North Pacific Ocean about 800 miles (1,300 km) west of La Paz, Mexico.

The moon will pass entirely out of the Earth's umbra at 10:01 UT/5:01 a.m. EST/2:01 a.m. PST and the last evidence of the penumbra should vanish about 15 or 20 minutes later.

Interestingly, from most of New Zealand, a slice of northeast Australia, Papua, New Guinea, southwest Japan and Korea, the moon will rise during totality on the evening of Dec. 21. Because of low altitude and bright evening twilight, observers in these locations may not see much of the moon at all until it begins to emerge from out of the Earth's shadow.

Conversely, much of the United Kingdom and parts of western and northern Europe will see the moon set during totality on the morning of Dec. 21. Because of low altitude and bright morning twilight, observers in these locations may not see much of the moon at all after it slips completely into the Earth's shadow.

The last total lunar eclipse occurred on Feb. 20 to Feb. 21, 2008 and was visible from most of the Americas, as well as Europe, much of Africa and western Asia. In 2011, there will be two total lunar eclipses. The first, on June 15, will be visible primarily from the Eastern Hemisphere and will have an unusually long duration of totality lasting one hour and 40 minutes.

Another total lunar eclipse will occur on Dec. 10 and will be visible over the western half of North America before moonset. For the next total lunar eclipse that will be visible across all of North America, we must wait until April 14 to April 15, 2014.

Drastically shortened from: http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20101217/sc_space/amazingspectacletotallunareclipsemondaynight

Joe Rao
SPACE.com Skywatching Columnist
SPACE.com
Fri Dec 17, 1:45 pm ET

I just love astronomical events!! Hope the night is clear for everyone! :)

Frith
12-21-2010, 03:41 AM
Thanks, this is a perfect way to celebrate the solstice. My sister and I plan to go watch bits of it because it's so cold out.

musi
12-21-2010, 04:12 AM
Nice, I will try to remember to look outside. I haven't seen a moon eclipse for a few years now - I'd love to refresh the memory :)

Winifred
12-21-2010, 01:49 PM
Well, I went out at 2 am, and couldn't see anything beyond a full moon. Went out again at 3:15 am, the moon was more than 1/2 gone, but kept disappearing behind the clouds.

That, in itself,was interesting: eclipse, eclipsed, star pops out elsewhere, both disappear, eclipse reappears, woke Gizmo, he got a glimpse, eclipse disappears. I gave up after awhile, not sure if the total eclipse was visible. I was very tired, and, it was indeed cold.

Did anyone else have better luck?

Frith
12-21-2010, 11:37 PM
Sadly, no such luck. =[ My sister and I were just about to go outside and we opened the door and guess what.....another blizzard; so much cloud coverage it was pitch black outside.

I'm very heartbroken at not witnessing the lunar eclipse.

Star_Anise
12-21-2010, 11:42 PM
I'm very heartbroken at not witnessing the lunar eclipse.

I didn't even have a chance to see it - Australia was out of the running for a view:(