The Moon will pass through the Earth's shadow between 01:46 and 06:23 EDT, creating a penumbral lunar eclipse. The eclipse will be visible any location where the Moon is above the horizon at the time, including from Antarctica, the Americas, Alaska, Oceania and north-eastern Russia.
It will be visible from Cambridge in the south-western sky. The Moon will lie 21° above the horizon at the moment of greatest eclipse.
Maximum eclipse will occur at 04:05 (all times given in Cambridge time).
A penumbral eclipse
Like other lunar eclipses, penumbral eclipses occur whenever the Earth passes between the Moon and Sun, such that it obscures the Sun's light and casts a shadow onto the Moon's surface. But unlike other kinds of eclipses, they are extremely subtle events to observe.
In a penumbral eclipse the Moon passes through an outer region of the Earth's shadow called the penumbra. This is the outer part of the Earth's shadow, in which the Earth appears to cover part of the Sun's disk, but not all of it (see diagram below). As a result, the Moon's brightness will be reduced, as it is less strongly illuminated by the Sun, but the whole of the Moon's disk will remain illuminated to some degree.
The effect is only perceptible to those with very astute vision, or in carefully controlled photographs.
This is a rare occasion when the whole of the Moon's face will pass within the Earth's penumbra, and so the reduction of the Moon's brightness will be more perceptible than usual. Such events are called total penumbral lunar eclipses, and are rare because the statistical chance that the Moon will enter the Earth's umbra at some point is very high once it has passed fully within its penumbra, and this makes an eclipse a partial lunar eclipse.
Timing
The table below lists the times when each part of the eclipse will begin and end.
Local time |
UTC | |
01:46 | 05:46 | Moon begins to enter the Earth's penumbra |
04:05 | 08:05 | Greatest eclipse |
06:23 | 10:23 | Moon leaves the Earth's penumbra |
Visibility of the eclipse
Eclipses of the Moon are visible anywhere where the Moon is above the horizon at the time. Since the geometry of lunar eclipses requires that the Moon is directly opposite the Sun in the sky, the Moon can be seen above the horizon anywhere where the Sun is beneath the horizon.
The map below shows where the eclipse of August 29 will be visible.
The eclipse geometry
Lunar eclipses occur when the Sun, Earth and Moon are aligned in a straight line, so that the Earth passes between the Sun and Moon and casts a shadow onto the latter's surface.
Each time the Moon orbits the Earth, it passes almost opposite to the Sun in the sky as it reaches Full Moon. If the Moon orbited the Earth in exactly the same plane that the Earth orbits the Sun, the Earth would pass between the Sun and Moon and create a lunar eclipse at Full Moon every month.
In fact, the Moon's orbit is tipped up at an angle of 5° relative to the Earth's orbit around the Sun. This means that the alignment of the Sun—Earth—Moon line at Full Moon usually isn't exact. As a result, an observer on the Moon would see the Earth pass a few degrees to the side of the Sun.
In the diagram to the right, the grid represents the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun. As it circles the Earth, the Moon passes through this Earth–Sun plane twice each month, at the points on the left and right labelled as nodes. A lunar eclipse happens only when one of these node crossings happens to coincide with Full Moon. This happens roughly once every six months, usually two weeks before or after a solar eclipse.
Further information
This eclipse is a member of Saros series 119. The position of the Moon at the moment of greatest eclipse is as follows:
Object | Right Ascension | Declination | Constellation | Angular Size |
The Moon | 22h28m | 8°32'S | Aquarius | 30'05" |
The coordinates above are given in J2000.0.
Next/previous eclipses
« Previous | Next » | |||
Visible from the Contiguous United States | Worldwide | Worldwide | Visible from the Contiguous United States | |
14 Apr 2052 | 04 Mar 2053 | Penumbral Lunar Eclipses | 01 Feb 2056 | 01 Feb 2056 |
08 Oct 2052 | 04 Mar 2053 | Lunar Eclipses | 22 Feb 2054 | 22 Feb 2054 |
08 Oct 2052 | 20 Mar 2053 | Eclipses | 12 Sep 2053 | 22 Feb 2054 |
The sky on 23 Nov 2024
The sky on 23 November 2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
36% 22 days old |
All times shown in EST.
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Source
[1] – |
The lunar eclipse predictions presented on this website were computed using EphemerisCompute. This is an open-source tool which traces the positions of the Sun, Earth and Moon over the course of each eclipse and traces the path of the Moon through the Earth's shadow. It was written by the author and freely available for download from GitHub. It takes the positions of each body from the JPL DE430 planetary ephemeris. |
[2] – |
Espanak, F., & Meeus, J., Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses: -1999 to +3000, NASA Technical Publication TP-2006-214141 (2006) |
[3] – |
The list of countries from which the eclipse is visible was computed on the basis of shape files available from DIVA-GIS. |
License
You may embed the map above in your own website. It is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license, which allows you to copy and/or modify it, so long as you credit In-The-Sky.org.
You can download it from:
https://in-the-sky.org/news/eclipses/lunar_20530829.png
Related news
29 Aug 2053 | – Full Moon |
05 Sep 2053 | – Moon at Last Quarter |
12 Sep 2053 | – New Moon |
19 Sep 2053 | – Moon at First Quarter |
Image credit
None available.