Factbox-'Beaver blood moon' offers world's last total lunar eclipse
until 2025
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[November 08, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Nighttime skywatchers from East
Asia to North America will be treated to the rare spectacle of a "Beaver
blood moon" on Tuesday, weather permitting, as the Earth, moon and sun
align to produce a total lunar eclipse for the last time until 2025.
Here are some key facts about the upcoming celestial display, unfolding
in an exceedingly unusual concurrence with Election Day in the United
States, and about lunar eclipses in general.
WHAT'S HAPPENING
A total lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth casts its shadow completely
over a full moon, blocking reflection of all direct sunlight from the
lunar orb and dimming the color of the moon to a reddish hue, hence the
term "blood moon."
This is only possible when the orbits of the Earth, moon and sun align
so that the moon is directly behind Earth relative to the sun.
Otherwise, the moon passes above or below Earth's shadow because its
orbit around Earth is usually tilted relative to Earth's orbit about the
sun.
WHY RED
The reddish appearance of the lunar surface - the moon does not entirely
disappear from view - is caused by rays of sunlight around the outer
edge of the eclipse shadow, or umbra, being filtered and refracted as it
passes through Earth's atmosphere, bathing the moon indirectly in a dim
copper glow.
The degree of redness depends on atmospheric conditions that vary with
levels of air pollution, dust storms, wildfire smoke and even volcanic
ash.
HOW RARE
Total lunar eclipses occur, on average, about once every year and a
half, according to NASA. But the interval varies. Tuesday's event will
mark the second blood moon this year, following one in mid-May. The next
one is not expected until March 14, 2025.
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A full moon rises behind an electricity
pylon with high-voltage power lines, amid Russia’s attack on
Ukraine, in Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukraine November 7, 2022.
REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
WHERE IT'S VISIBLE
Tuesday's eclipse will be visible across eastern Asia, Australia,
the Pacific and North America. Skywatchers in Asia and Australia
will see it with their evening moonrise, while the spectacle will
play out for observers in North America in the early morning hours
before the moon sets. It will be visible to the naked eye wherever
skies are clear in those regions.
HOW LONG IT LASTS
The entire eclipse will unfold over a period of nearly six hours as
the moon gradually edges into the Earth's paler, outer shadow, its
"penumbra," then enters the Earth's darker, inner shadow, or
"umbra," before reaching totality and eventually emerging from the
other side.
On the West Coast of the United States, the whole display will run
from 12:01 a.m. PST until just before 6 a.m., with the total eclipse
phase lasting about 90 minutes, peaking at 3 a.m.
WHY BEAVER MOON
Tuesday's event will coincide with the "Beaver moon," a moniker for
November's full moon adopted by the Old Farmer's Almanac supposedly
from Algonquian languages once spoken by Native Americans in the New
England territory. When combined with the phenomena of a total lunar
eclipse, it is widely referred to as a "Beaver blood moon" in the
United States.
Sources: NASA; Space.com; Sky & Telescope magazine; Griffith
Observatory; Old Farmer's Almanac
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Christopher
Cushing)
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