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EE_
19th December 2010, 12:05 PM
Amazing Spectacle: Total Lunar Eclipse Monday Night
Fri Dec 17, 1:45 pm ET

For a few hours on the night of Dec. 20 to Dec. 21, the attention of tens of millions of people will be drawn skyward, where the mottled, coppery globe of our moon will hang completely immersed in the long, tapering cone of shadow cast out into space by our Earth. 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, eclipses of the moon can usually be observed from one's own backyard. 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. [Amazing photos of a total lunar eclipse]

This star chart shows where in the sky the upcoming lunar eclipse will appear. And check this NASA lunar eclipse chart to see how visible the eclipse will be from different regions around the world.

Stages of the eclipse

There is nothing complicated about viewing this celestial spectacle. Unlike an eclipse of the sun, which necessitates special viewing precautions in order to avoid eye damage, an eclipse of the moon is perfectly safe to watch. All you'll need to watch are your eyes, but binoculars or a telescope will give a much nicer view.

The eclipse will actually begin when the moon enters the faint outer portion, or penumbra, of the Earth's shadow a little over an hour before it begins moving into the umbra. The penumbra, however, is all but invisible to the eye until the moon becomes deeply immersed in it. Sharp-eyed viewers may get their first glimpse of the penumbra as a faint smudge on the left part of the moon's disk 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 most noticeable part of this eclipse will come when the moon begins to enter the Earth's dark inner shadow (called the umbra). A small scallop of darkness will begin to appear on the moon's left edge at 6:33 UT (on Dec. 21) corresponding to 1:33 a.m. EST or 10:33 p.m. PST (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.

Color and brightness in question

During totality, although the moon will be entirely immersed in the Earth's shadow, it likely will not disappear from sight. Rather, it should appear to turn a coppery red color, a change caused by the Earth's atmosphere bending or refracting sunlight into the shadow.

Since the Earth's shadow is cone-shaped and extends out into space for about 844,000 miles (1,358,000 km), sunlight will be strained through a sort of "double sunset," all around the rim of the Earth, into its shadow and then onto the moon.

However, because of the recent eruptions of the Eyjafjallajökull volcano last spring and the Merapi volcano in Indonesia in October, one and possibly even two clouds of ash and dust might be floating high above the Earth. As a result, the moon may appear darker than usual during this eclipse; during totality, parts of the moon might even become black and invisible.

A careful description of the colors seen on the totally eclipsed moon and their changes is valuable. The hues depend on the optical equipment used, usually appearing more vivid with the naked eye than in telescopes. The French astronomer Andre-Louis Danjon introduced the following five-point scale of lunar luminosity ("L") to classify eclipses:

L = 0: Very dark eclipse, moon almost invisible, especially in mid-totality.

L = 1: Dark eclipse, gray or brownish coloration, details distinguishable only with difficulty.

L = 2: Deep red or rust-colored eclipse, with a very dark central part in the shadow, and outer edge of the umbra relatively bright.

L = 3: Brick red eclipse, usually with a bright or yellow rim to the shadow.

L = 4: Very bright copper-red or orange eclipse, with a bluish very bright shadow rim.

Examine the moon at mid-totality and also near the beginning and end of totality to get an impression of both the inner and outer umbra. In noting an L observation, state the time and optical means (naked eye, binoculars or telescope) that is used. We invite readers to e-mail their Danjon estimate for this eclipse (along with any pictures they'd like to share) to cmoskowitz-at-SPACE.com.

At mid-totality, from rural locations far from city lights, the darkness of the sky is impressive. Faint stars and the Milky Way will appear, and the surrounding landscape will take on a somber hue. As totality ends, the eastern edge of the moon begins to emerge from the umbra, and the sequence of events repeats in reverse order until the spectacle is over.

Fringe effects

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.

Past and future

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.

Twisted Titan
19th December 2010, 12:50 PM
;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=840B27zYfOk

keehah
19th December 2010, 08:41 PM
Lets get the party started, why wait another two years? You know who too thought it was time to astrology up.

He makes a good case its two days away not two years. I've always know true scholars only offered a range of 6 years or so, and that we are already past the midpoint. And we just had the grant cross.

Mayan 2012 is really December 21, 2010
http://twelvebooks.wordpress.com/2010/12/16/dec-16-2010-an-earthquake-swarm-in-southern-california-now-and-is-it-related-to-the-lunar-eclipse-of-dec-21/

2010 is a WHOPPER! And is more the REAL 2012. The alignments of December 21, 2012 is nowhere near the power of December 21, 2010

More and more astrologers say this year is the one. They were 2 years off !!!!!!...

All the astrologers say 2010 is a heck of a lot more crazy than 2012. Yeah its a countdown all right

Also, this somehow adds up with the 2012 Movie, “We didn’t get the Date right”, the Movie is about the 2012 Theme but is taking place in 2010 or 2011 as I remember right from the movie....

On 21st December 2010 coincides with a total lunar eclipse. This is the only lunar eclipse that will occur over this period of 36 years or so during which the winter solstice sunrise is directly aligned to the Galactic Centre. ...It will be visible over the America’s and particularly the west coast of America, Central America and South America – home to the Maya.



p.s. Sorry for the short notice. ;)

At the least the planet should get a good earthquake the next few days.

jaybone
20th December 2010, 06:48 AM
http://www.kairosastrology.co.uk/astro/

http://www.youtube.com/user/alchemyjohn#p/a/u/0/AFv16ah2szM

I am going to be out there to see this. From eclipse to sunrise.

BrewTech
20th December 2010, 07:26 AM
Been waiting on this for awhile, got the telescope ready to go!


Looks like we're gonna get fooked on this one... incessant rain forecast through Wednesday. Hopefully the clouds will break and we can check it out! I love stuff like this...

sirgonzo420
20th December 2010, 11:51 AM
Lets get the party started, why wait another two years? You know who too thought it was time to astrology up.

He makes a good case its two days away not two years. I've always know true scholars only offered a range of 6 years or so, and that we are already past the midpoint. And we just had the grant cross.

Mayan 2012 is really December 21, 2010
http://twelvebooks.wordpress.com/2010/12/16/dec-16-2010-an-earthquake-swarm-in-southern-california-now-and-is-it-related-to-the-lunar-eclipse-of-dec-21/

2010 is a WHOPPER! And is more the REAL 2012. The alignments of December 21, 2012 is nowhere near the power of December 21, 2010

More and more astrologers say this year is the one. They were 2 years off !!!!!!...

All the astrologers say 2010 is a heck of a lot more crazy than 2012. Yeah its a countdown all right

Also, this somehow adds up with the 2012 Movie, “We didn’t get the Date right”, the Movie is about the 2012 Theme but is taking place in 2010 or 2011 as I remember right from the movie....

On 21st December 2010 coincides with a total lunar eclipse. This is the only lunar eclipse that will occur over this period of 36 years or so during which the winter solstice sunrise is directly aligned to the Galactic Centre. ...It will be visible over the America’s and particularly the west coast of America, Central America and South America – home to the Maya.



p.s. Sorry for the short notice. ;)

At the least the planet should get a good earthquake the next few days.



There goes christmas!

cthulu
20th December 2010, 01:28 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owZPspxJ4jw

Book
20th December 2010, 01:58 PM
I am going to be out there to see this. From eclipse to sunrise.



http://www.ghosttheory.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/werewolft.jpg

Obvious werewolf ploy to get humans outdoors late at night looking up and not noticing them chewing on their leg. Don't do it buddy!

:)

k-os
20th December 2010, 11:14 PM
I can't wait!

Neuro
21st December 2010, 12:17 AM
It coincides with the winter solstice as well... Can't see anything here though... Daytime... How's it going?

PatColo
21st December 2010, 12:47 AM
full eclipse is on now. I walked out 15 mins ago, clear starry night, and caught just the last ~5% edge still bright, and watched that close. It's a really interesting color, hard to describe.

:)

Libertarian_Guard
21st December 2010, 01:06 AM
Clear skies on Long Island N.Y.

A few minutes ago the Moon was almost completely in the Earth's shadow, I'll call it a light red colored shadow, except for a small sliver from about twelve o'clock to about four o' clock.

Oh fudge, now we've got a light cloud cover moving across, and less of the Moon is in the shadow.

jaybone
21st December 2010, 01:16 AM
very cool, very cold.

last time this happened was 1638
http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1638

General of Darkness
21st December 2010, 05:45 AM
It's not only raining like a mofo here in L.A. it's also raining in my house. GoD's house got stabbed. >:(

mamboni
21st December 2010, 06:27 AM
Inexplicably I awoke at 2:50 AM with my two mini schnauzers sleeping next to me. My wife was sound asleep. I figured that I might as well get up to view the lunar eclipse. I couldn't see it from inside the house so I deactivated the home alarm and strolled out to the front property with my three dogs in tow - the giant schnauzer joined us. It was a beautiful crisp clear night with thousands of stars and constellations visable. High up in the sky was a pumpkin-colored glowing moon with just the slightest golden yellow fringe running clockwise from 12 - 4 pm. The air was dead still and there was almost no ambient light except for a low glow on the southern horizon emanating from Philadelphia 40 miles away. Spooky beautiful is how I would describe it - spellbinding - like something out of a van Gogh painting. I'm glad I had some insomnia last night! ;D

EE_
21st December 2010, 07:13 AM
Glad some of you got to see it. Here it only made the clouds look darker. :-\

jaybone
21st December 2010, 07:32 AM
Inexplicably I awoke at 2:50 AM with my two mini schnauzers sleeping next to me. My wife was sound asleep. I figured that I might as well get up to view the lunar eclipse. I couldn't see it from inside the house so I deactivated the home alarm and strolled out to the front property with my three dogs in tow - the giant schnauzer joined us. It was a beautiful crisp clear night with thousands of stars and constellations visable. High up in the sky was a pumpkin-colored glowing moon with just the slightest golden yellow fringe running clockwise from 12 - 4 pm. The air was dead still and there was almost no ambient light except for a low glow on the southern horizon emanating from Philadelphia 40 miles away. Spooky beautiful is how I would describe it - spellbinding - like something out of a van Gogh painting. I'm glad I had some insomnia last night! ;D


Spooky beautiful is a perfect way to describe it.
Unusually clear for megalopolis. The red giant Betelgeuse in Orion was so red it almost looked like mars, Venus twinkling to the left of the eclipse.
I was using some astronomical binoculars and was able to see the colors of different stars more clearly than I ever have; reds, yellows, blues.
Even made out the tiny smudge of the Orion Nebula.

At full eclipse I took a broom handle and pointed it at the moon, I explained to my lady that along the plane of that stick was the moon, the earth's core, the sun's core and the center of the milky way where there is most likely a supemassive black hole, all lined up right here, right now on the shortest day of the year. That was followed by some cold, quiet contemplation time.

I am really glad I got out of bed to experience it, despite having to endure a 12 hour shift as a zombie today.

General of Darkness
21st December 2010, 07:53 AM
This was me last night.

http://media.ebaumsworld.com/mediaFiles/picture/428695/880161.jpg

mamboni
21st December 2010, 08:13 AM
Inexplicably I awoke at 2:50 AM with my two mini schnauzers sleeping next to me. My wife was sound asleep. I figured that I might as well get up to view the lunar eclipse. I couldn't see it from inside the house so I deactivated the home alarm and strolled out to the front property with my three dogs in tow - the giant schnauzer joined us. It was a beautiful crisp clear night with thousands of stars and constellations visable. High up in the sky was a pumpkin-colored glowing moon with just the slightest golden yellow fringe running clockwise from 12 - 4 pm. The air was dead still and there was almost no ambient light except for a low glow on the southern horizon emanating from Philadelphia 40 miles away. Spooky beautiful is how I would describe it - spellbinding - like something out of a van Gogh painting. I'm glad I had some insomnia last night! ;D




At full eclipse I took a broom handle and pointed it at the moon, I explained to my lady that along the plane of that stick was the moon, the earth's core, the sun's core and the center of the milky way where there is most likely a supemassive black hole, all lined up right here, right now on the shortest day of the year. That was followed by some cold, quiet contemplation time.



I was thinking the same at the time, about all the heavenly bodies aligned on the solstice - what were the odds?
Has to mean something me thinks. I had a dreaded sense of forboding last night.

Book
21st December 2010, 08:24 AM
http://www.zmescience.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/lunar_eclipse_diagram_030425_03.gif

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_eclipse

Book
21st December 2010, 08:27 AM
last time this happened was 1638



A total lunar eclipse will take place on June 15, 2011. It is the first of two total lunar eclipses in 2011, the second occurring on December 10. It is a relatively rare central eclipse where the moon passes in front of the center of the Earth's shadow.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/June_2011_lunar_eclipse

DMac
21st December 2010, 08:30 AM
last time this happened was 1638



A total lunar eclipse will take place on June 15, 2011. It is the first of two total lunar eclipses in 2011, the second occurring on December 10. It is a relatively rare central eclipse where the moon passes in front of the center of the Earth's shadow.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/June_2011_lunar_eclipse


Right. I've seen several lunar eclipses and I'm not that old!

jaybone
21st December 2010, 09:47 AM
That was the last time there was a lunar eclipse on the winter solstice.
Garden variety lunar eclipses happen all the time.

Awoke
21st December 2010, 11:38 AM
Pics or it didn't happen.

;D

Book
21st December 2010, 11:43 AM
http://images.astronet.ru/pubd/2006/04/04/0001212785/eclipse2006_seip.jpg

A Total Solar Eclipse over Turkey - 04 April 2006

:)

Twisted Titan
21st December 2010, 12:21 PM
I tried but I couldnt stay awake.......

Any one got picks???


T

Bullion_Bob
21st December 2010, 07:18 PM
That was the last time there was a lunar eclipse on the winter solstice.
Garden variety lunar eclipses happen all the time.


Correct. Last night was something you will only witness in several lifetimes.

I saw it, and the conditions were absolutely excellent. As a perk is I got a nice (very thick almost sparkling) shooting star first time I went out and sat down (around 10% into the beginning).


"The last time the solstice coincided with a total lunar eclipse on the same calendar day was long before any of our lifetimes, experts say. The year, according to Geoff Chester, public affairs officer at the U.S. Naval Observatory, was 1638. (Starhawk, a prominent Wiccan, told The Washington Post in an essay that the two events have not coincided since 1544.)"

Santa
21st December 2010, 08:29 PM
Here's my photo of the moon last night. :)

Unfortunately, while I did take this slightly oof photo of the moon, it was really too early, and long before the eclipse. I just couldn't stay up that late. Santa's getting old. I added an orange filter to make it look as I remember the full eclipse looking the last time I saw one.
An eclipse causes the moon to look very 3 dimensional, like an orange marble floating in a Prussian blue sky. Exquisite. Sorry I missed it.

http://i915.photobucket.com/albums/ac358/jackconrad/junk/d9af9a99.jpg

Horn
21st December 2010, 08:32 PM
Great post, Santa.

Be sure to plot a course around that big orange to my house.

Santa
21st December 2010, 08:56 PM
Great post, Santa.

Be sure to plot a course around that big orange to my house.



Not to worry, my boy. I'm sure you'll get what's coming to you. :D

k-os
22nd December 2010, 10:09 AM
I stayed up for it, which was past my bedtime.

It was really cold out (23 degrees) and clear. The stars were particularly bright. I made a cup of chamomile tea, and stood outside with my neck straight up.

My favorite part was the last few minutes before the moon was completely eclipsed. It was like my eyes or brain was playing tricks on me.

I thought about how cool it was that other people, all over the country, were looking up at the same time.

Awoke
22nd December 2010, 10:34 AM
Found this:

Horn
22nd December 2010, 10:49 AM
Found this:




Now that's amazingly biright!!