Is anybody watching the blood moon overnight tonight?
I was just coming on to post a reminder about it.
Tonight's total lunar eclipse is best seen from the Western Hemisphere (at mid-eclipse, the Moon will be overhead from a spot in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Ecuador). For North America it will be in the south, with bright red Mars and blue Spica nearby.
The times are as follows:
Partial Eclipse Begins: 0519 UT (0058 US CDT)
Total Eclipse Begins: 0747 UT (0207 CDT)
Mid-eclipse: 0740 UT (0246 CDT)
Total Eclipse Ends: 0835 UT (0325 CDT)
Partial Eclipse Ends: 0904 UT (0433 CDT)
The skies here are expected to be clear as more Canadian high pressure moves through. The catch is that the winds are howling out of the northwest right now, and we may have a possible low temperature reading for the date tonight (18F/-8C).
The next eclipse in this rather unusual set of 4 comes in October.
But all night, Aslan and the Moon gazed upon each other with joyful and unblinking eyes.
Would any of those be visible from Northern Europe - or would they all be in our daytime and not applicable at all?
(avi artwork by Henning Janssen)
Unfortunately I don't know the answer to your question Varna so I will defer to someone who does.
I was up from 1:45am to 2:15am Central time. My husband discovered he could set up the telescope in the kitchen and we could watch through the window. Hooray! It saved us from having to bundle up to go outside. Anyways, I watched it from when the Earth's shadow covered about half of it until it was fully eclipsed and brownish red. Very cool. That's the first time I ever remember seeing an eclipse.
Would any of those be visible from Northern Europe - or would they all be in our daytime and not applicable at all?
Here are prospects for the next 3 events of this tetrad:
October 8: No eclipse from Europe or Africa. The Pacific sees the whole event, with it occurring around sunrise for the Americas and sunset for Australia and much of Asia.
April 4, 2015: roughly the same visibility as the October event. This barely qualifies as total; totality lasts less than 5 minutes (compared to 77 minutes for this morning's eclipse).
September 28, 2015: The Atlantic basin is favored this time, with Norway barely able to see the entire eclipse in the early morning hours. Sunrise (moonset) interferes with the view from much of Europe, and it is in progress at sunset (moonrise) for western North America (South America and eastern North America will see the whole event early in the evening).
After this series of 4, the next total lunar eclipse comes January 31, 2018.
For a list of dates, times, areas of visibility, and much more, check out NASA's Lunar Eclipse list for this decade.
Glad you enjoyed the view, fantasia!
Yesterday was blustery and variably cloudy here, but the TV weather people all said it would be clear for the eclipse. But each time I went out before totality, I was met with plenty of clouds and even some snow flurries!
But the area around the Moon cleared by totality and I had a nice view of the red and orange Moon near Spica with Mars about 10 degrees to the upper right of the Moon. The sky remained cooperative until the last partial phase ended around 0430, when I decided it was time to get some sleep.
But all night, Aslan and the Moon gazed upon each other with joyful and unblinking eyes.
the Mrs. and I got up a tad after 2AM and took some pictures . I was able to get a tripod up, and did the 2 second delay to remove as much shaking as I could. Fortunatly the wind was not much of a factor.
The only down side was that the more expensive camera, with the better zoom could not get the red tint hardly at all, while my inexpensive Wal-Mart special could pick up the colors brilliantly, but got fuzzier with the zoom.
Missed it! Missed the eclipse. And not for lack of trying. It was at a reasonable time for us (beginning at 11:30 pm) but when I went out to feed the lamb at 11, there was this large, ominous cloud effacing the moon. And there it stayed. So frustrating, as the last few nights had been clear and bright.
Did anyone else watch the recent SpaceX rocket launch? I found it quite thrilling, as I haven't watched many such occasions; the part my brother was interested in was the Stage 1 recovery attempt. They didn't end up showing any footage of that Still hoping that it shows up on the net.
Now my days are swifter than a post: they flee away ... my days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle
Sorry you missed the eclipse, aileth! I believe next October's event will be a good one for your location, especially if you're an early riser.
I saw some online coverage of the SpaceX launch but not the stage recovery attempt. Always fun to watch a launch.
This morning I happened to wake up just in time to catch the thinning crescent moon just to the upper right of Venus, both shining low in the pre-dawn sky. Both were dimmed by haze but earthshine was still evident. The birds were heralding the coming day. All in all, quite pretty!
But all night, Aslan and the Moon gazed upon each other with joyful and unblinking eyes.
North America is well-situated for a potential meteor shower this weekend, one most astronomers have never heard of.
That's because it may be a new shower, formed as the earth passes near a dim comet and encounters its debris stream.
It could bring anywhere from 100 to 400 (or even up to 1000) meteors per hour in a dark location - or maybe far fewer than that.
It means getting up in the wee hours, though, as the peak is expected around 0630 to0730 UTC on this Saturday, May 24. This is around 3 am on the East Coast and midnight in the West.
Read all about it here.
But all night, Aslan and the Moon gazed upon each other with joyful and unblinking eyes.
I had a friend post about that meteor shower on his FB page a couple days ago. Sounds cool! Too bad they're predicting storms throughout the entire weekend.... But if it clears off, I'll definitely go take a peek.
Looking forward to it stargazer. I can only hope that there will be clear skies.
Our backyard has a pretty good northern view, and if my camera cooperates it would be nice to actually get some pics.
I woke up at 3 a.m. on the early morning of the meteor shower and wandered outside in the dark quiet of the night. The sky was gorgeous, so that alone was worth seeing. I sat there for a half hour and saw ... 1 meteor. It was very cool, of course, but we were all wishing for more, weren't we?!
Thanks for the info on the lunar eclipses, stargazer. And, fantasia, 'tis excellent that you were able to see some of the recent eclipse through the telescope. Glad you viewed it too, Puddleglum and 'gazer. aileth, I can relate: the skies did not cooperate for us here either.
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johobbit. Much the same experiance here. Though my lake of viewing was more due to compleat cloud cover. I scanned the computer, and found nothing of anyone really reporting the spectical that was expected.
I guess this one can be marked as a dud.
I just heard mention on the news that there is supposed to be some rather good northern lights tonight. Anyone have anything spectacular to report?
Will most likely hop out quick myself before turning in.
Alas, I saw nothing that night, Puddleglum, though my urban vantage point leaves something to be desired in aurora viewing.
Get ready for not one but 3 consecutive "supermoons" beginning this month. (They come when full moon coincides with perigee, the moon's closest point to earth). (This also happened last year but only one really got any press).
Astronomers point out that the 14% size increase and 30% light increase are much less impressive than they sound, and not that easily seen. The moon looks huge when it's rising thanks to the still rather mysterious "moon illusion." Read more here.
But all night, Aslan and the Moon gazed upon each other with joyful and unblinking eyes.