Total Lunar Eclipse
News story originally written on May 15, 2003


The Moon during a total lunar eclipse in November 1993.
Click on image for full size (13K JPEG )
Courtesy of Andy Steere

The first eclipse of 2003 will occur on the night of Thursday, May 15th (or early in the morning on May 16th if you live in Europe!). This eclipse is a total lunar eclipse, so the Earth's shadow will darken the Moon. The entire eclipse lasts more than three hours, while the "total eclipse phase" spans a period of about 50 minutes. If you live in the eastern part of North America, the middle of the eclipse occurs around 11:40 P.M.; mid-eclipse occurs near 8:40 P.M. for viewers on the West Coast.

Earth's shadow has two parts: a lighter outer ring, and an inner, darker circle. During a total lunar eclipse, the Moon passes through both sections of this shadow, so there are several different stages to the eclipse. The link to NASA's page about this eclipse (below) provides details about the times of the different stages for viewers in various locations. Even during the darkest stage of the eclipse the Moon will still be visible; red light refracted through Earth's atmosphere lights the Moon to a dull copper hue.

Unlike solar eclipses, lunar eclipses ARE safe to view without any special filters or other equipment. The alignment of Earth, the Sun, and the Moon during a lunar eclipse is related to the alignment that produces the rarer solar eclipses. Sometimes this means that solar and lunar eclipses occur around the same time (within two weeks of each other). That is indeed the case this time around! A total eclipse of the Sun will be visible in parts of Greenland, Iceland, and Scotland on May 31, 2003. Be careful if you are lucky enough to see that eclipse - direct viewing of a solar eclipse without special precautions IS very dangerous!

NASA lunar eclipse page

Table of recent and future lunar eclipses

Total Lunar Eclipse
News story originally written on May 15, 2003


The Moon during an eclipse in 1993.
Click on image for full size (13K JPEG)
Courtesy of Andy Steere

There will be an eclipse of the Moon on Thursday night, May 15, 2003. It will be the first eclipse in 2003. This eclipse is a total eclipse of the Moon, which means the Moon will pass through the darkest part of Earth's shadow.

During the eclipse, the Moon will look dark red. Even the darkest part of Earth's shadow lets a little light through. The light that gets through passes through Earth's atmosphere, which blocks out the light that isn't red. That's why the Sun looks red at sunset, too.

The main part of the eclipse will last about 50 minutes. Check out the link to NASA's site (below) to find out when the eclipse can be seen from where you live.

NASA lunar eclipse page

Table of recent and future eclipses of the Moon

Total Lunar Eclipse
News story originally written on May 15, 2003


The Moon during a total lunar eclipse in November 1993.
Click on image for full size (13K JPEG)
Courtesy of Andy Steere

There will be an eclipse of the Moon on Thursday night, May 15, 2003. The shadow of the Earth will fall on the Moon, and the Moon will get dark!

The Moon will not be so dark that you can't see it. The Moon will be dark red, not black. Some sunlight goes through Earth's atmosphere and lights the Moon a little bit. Only red light gets through, so the Moon looks red.

The main part of the eclipse is about 50 minutes long. Want to know if you can see the eclipse where you live? Look at the link to NASA below to find out when to look for the eclipse.

NASA lunar eclipse page

Table of some eclipses of the Moon


Last modified May 13, 2003 by the Windows Team

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