Monday, September 28, 2015

PHOTOS: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse Lights Up Night Sky

By Brett Rathbun, AccuWeather.com Meteorologist
September 28,2015; 9:13PM,EDT
 
 
(Facebook photo/Chris Spiegel)
A lunar eclipse coincided with a supermoon on Sunday night and dazzled stargazers across the globe.
The moon made its closest proximity to Earth appearing up to 14 percent larger, giving way to the term supermoon.
As the moon passed behind the Earth into its shadow, a red tint formed across its surface in what is known as a blood moon.
RELATED:
The Best Places for Stargazing in the East
AccuWeather Astronomy Blog
Photos From Previous Lunar Eclipse on April 4, 2015

Parts of North and South America and Europe had Mother Nature provide clear skies to allow many to enjoy the view of the blood moon as well as take photographs of its appearance.
Those who were unable to view the eclipse due to cloud cover, a replay of the live broadcast from Slooh can be seen below:
The supermoon portion of the eclipse lasted roughly 72 minutes and reached totality at 10:47 p.m. EDT (2:47 UTC).
The next total lunar eclipse will occur on Jan. 31, 2018 and be visible across Asia, Australia and the western half of North America. The next supermoon lunar eclipse will be in 2033.

The moon was visible at the beginning of the eclipse in El Paso, Texas. (Photo/NWSElPaso)
The NWS office in El Paso captured the moon at totality. (Photo/NWSElPaso)
Ocean Grove, New Jersey. (Facebook photo/Chris Spiegel)
Lunar eclipse visible from St. Charles, Minnesota. (Twitter photo/@mckg12)
View of the Super Blood Moon across Syracuse, New York. (Twitter photo/@VinceSchilling)
Supermoon Lunar Eclipse view from Pleasant Grove, Utah. (Twitter photo/@jeremyhall)
Davenport, Iowa. (Photo/NWSQuadCities)
La Crosse, Wisconsin. (Photo/NWSLaCrosse)
AccuWeather Staff Writer Katy Galimberti contributed content to this story.
 
Baldwinsville, NY. Credit: Kevin Baker. .
 
 
The over the @EmpireStateBldg in New York @nyc @newyork @EverythingNYC
 
 
 
View image on Twitter
Here's another new 7 image composite, average 15s exposure apiece. Very dark in the viewfinder.
Tonight's from Seattle with a side of Space Needle - AMAZING!
Winning pic over Washington monument in DC from Harrison Jones @NASA @JimCantore
 
Totality over central Alberta @mikesobel @MargeauxMorin @TamithaSkov

No comments:

Post a Comment