Your views of the Blood Moon
Sky gazers caught a glimpse of the "blood moon" crossing the Earth's shadow Tuesday in all its splendor.
The moon took on a reddish hue as it appeared in different
phases between 2 and 4:30 a.m. ET.
In North and South America, where the blood moon was
most prominent, observers pointed at the spectacle with binoculars, telescopes
and cellphones.
Depending on time zones, it started late Monday
night or in the wee hours of Tuesday morning. Showers and clouds rendered it a
bust in some cities, including Atlanta.
In Los Angeles, the chance to view the total lunar
eclipse lured thousands to the Griffith Observatory. Families spread out
blankets on the grass to take in views from dozens of telescopes set up like a
stand of small trees.
Cameras clicked while watchers cheered and pointed
at the blushing moon.
"It's energizing. Look around. Everybody is
here to see something rare and live," said Gene Ireland, who teaches
astronomy to middle school students.
Ireland encouraged those who reached the hilltop
observatory grounds to peek through his 12-inch Dobsonian reflector telescope.
"Everyone is always looking down at their
phones, their iPads," he said. "We want them looking up. Looking up,
you see a whole different world. Getting away from the cities and traffic, and
the sky is just beautiful."
'Blood moons'
In a total lunar eclipse, the full moon turns a
coppery red as it passes into Earth's shadow. During the process, the moon's
bright glow dims, taking on a red hue because of shimmers of sunlight and
sunsets seeping through the Earth's atmosphere.
Dust and sulfur dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere
can affect the size of the shadow. The moon has to be full for the total lunar
eclipse to occur.
As more of the moon emerges from the shadow, its red
tint fades as it gets lighter and transitions to its normal silver color. The
entire reddening process takes about an hour.
Left out
In Tuesday's spectacle, clouds hid the view from
half of the United States, but cities such as Dallas, Denver and Los Angeles
had optimal, front-row seats.
"Woke up in just enough time to see half of the
blood moon," tweeted LaTara Hammers of Columbia, Missouri. "It's so
cool how the universe works."
South and North American residents watched the
entire spectacle, while observers in the Western Pacific caught the second half
of the event. Central Asia and some parts of Europe and Africa didn't see much
-- the moon was setting in most of those continents during the eclipse.
"You know what's even weirder than the 'blood
moon'? The entire solar system and how amazing it perpetually is always while
we barely notice," Johnny Argent tweeted.
'A chance arrangement of gravity'
Ed Krupp, director of the observatory, described it
as a "typical copper red" total lunar eclipse.
Though rare, it's the sky "conspiring into a
special event" that helps draw crowds, he said.
"The fact that there are four lunar successions
coming this year and next ... is unusual," Krupp said. "But it's not
the kind of thing astronomers get worked up about. It doesn't really mean
anything. It's a chance arrangement of gravity and the motions of objects in the
solar system, primarily the Earth and moon."
Unlike solar eclipses, lunar eclipses are safe to
view with the naked eye and don't require special filters.
The rare sight and was virtually unheard of a few
centuries ago.
Before the 20th century, there was a 300-year period
when there were no blood moons, said Fred Espenak, a NASA eclipse expert.
"The most unique thing about the 2014-2015
tetrad is that all of them are visible for all or parts of the USA," he
said.
Three more chances
If you missed it Tuesday, there will be more
opportunities.
North America will see a blood moon four times -- known as a tetrad -- between
now and September of next year. In addition to Tuesday, it will make another
appearance on October 8 of this year, and April 4 and September 28 of next
year.
Miss those, and you'll have
to wait until 2032.
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