How to see the entire lunar eclipse and blood moon on September 7


Evening Since September 7, the second (and final) of the entire eclipse of the year is held – using the dramatic “Blood Moon” landscape in the sky in many worlds.

All lunar congestion occurs when the Earth is between the full moon and the sun, with the moon in the shadow of our planet. However, instead of disappearing in the dark, the shadowed moon becomes red instead. This is due to a phenomenon called rail scattering.

The visible sunlight, while white, is actually made of lights of different colors that have different wavelengths and these are different when passing it to the Earth’s atmosphere. During a lunar eclipse, shorter wavelength than visible light, towards the blue end of the visible spectrum, scattered out, away from the shadow area by the ground. But those who have longer wavelengths to the red part of the spectrum are instead bent and poured into the shade area and on the surface of the moon.

This year’s first lunar eclipse was seen in the United States in March, but unfortunately if you are on the American continent, you want to miss the bloodstream this time. The overall stage of this September eclipse – when the moon is in the shadow of the Earth and appears in deep red – will be visible throughout Asia, Central and East Africa and Australia. These maps from Timeanddate.com show that the entire eclipse can be seen on this planet.

The general stage begins at 17:30 UTC on September 7, with the maximum moment of eclipse approximately 40 minutes later, 18:11 UTC, and the whole and then another 40 minutes. Before and after the whole, the moon becomes somewhat caught and first increases and then the shade decreases. Timeanddate.com also has a search tool in the city, where you can enter your place to find the time of cramping where you are.

If you are not observed in an area but still want to watch live, the virtual telescope project – conceived and coordinated by the Italian Gianluca Masi – offers live broadcast of Eclipse and Moon Moon on YouTube.

This lunar eclipse will occur under the three days before the moon arrives, a point where it is close to the ground, meaning it looks slightly larger than the average during the event.

After September 7, the next lunar eclipse will not happen until early March 2026 – but fortunately for those in the United States, it will be visible in North America, Australia and East Asia.

This story appeared first Wired Italy And translated from Italian.

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