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Monday, October 6, 2014
Total lunar eclipse on Wednesday will have an unusual twist
Total lunar eclipse on Wednesday will have an unusual twist
A photo of the first total lunar eclipse of 2014 taken from Arizona.
Ron Delvaux via The Virtual Telescope Project
Observers of Wednesday morning's total lunar eclipse might be able to catch sight of an extremely rare cosmic sight.
On Oct. 8, Interested skywatchers should attempt to see the total eclipse of the moon
and the rising sun simultaneously. The little-used name for this effect
is called a "selenelion," a phenomenon that celestial geometry says
cannot happen.
And indeed, during a lunar eclipse, the sun and
moon are exactly 180 degrees apart in the sky. In a perfect alignment
like this (called a "syzygy"), such an observation would seem
impossible. But thanks to Earth's atmosphere, the images of both the sun
and moon are apparently lifted above the horizon by atmospheric
refraction. This allows people on Earth to see the sun for several extra
minutes before it actually has risen and the moon for several extra
minutes after it has actually set. [How to See the Total Lunar Eclipse (Visibility Maps)]
As
a consequence of this atmospheric trick, for many localities east of
the Mississippi River, watchers will have a chance to observe this
unusual sight firsthand. Weather permitting, you could have a short
window of roughly 2 to 9 minutes (depending on your location) with the
possibility of simultaneously seeing the sun rising in the east while
the eclipsed full moon is setting in the west. Regions of visibility
From Newfoundland, the start of the partial stages of the total eclipse begins about 30 to 45 minutes before moonset.
A
growing scallop of darkness will appear on the upper left part of the
moon when it sets as the sun is coming up. Across eastern Nova Scotia,
only the lowermost portion of the moon will be in view as it drops below
the western horizon. Farther to the west and south along the Atlantic
seaboard, the moon will rise completely immersed in the Earth's shadow.
The
map shows the visibility regions for the Oct. 8, 2014 total lunar
eclipse, which is the second of four consecutive total eclipses of the
moon between 2014 and 2015. Sky & Telescope Magazine released this
viewing map.
Sky & Telescope Magazine
Now you see it ... now you don't?
Then
again, sighting a selenelion might be problematic feat. Twenty-five
years ago, in the August 1989 issue of Sky & Telescope, Bradley
Schaefer, an astronomer who extensively studied the visibility of the
moon when it was low in the sky, noted that the full moon only becomes
visible when it is about 2 degrees up and the sun is about 2 degrees
below the horizon.
So, depending on the clarity of your sky, you
might have up to roughly 10 to 15 minutes before sunrise for the sky to
still be dark enough, and the moon to be high enough above any horizon
haze for it to be clearly visible. And keep in mind that this holds only
for the uneclipsed portion of the moon. You might, however, be able to mitigate the effects of a brightening sky somewhat by using binoculars or a telescope.
If the moon is totally eclipsed
prior to sunrise, you probably are going to have to scan the western
horizon with binoculars as the twilight brightens in order to still
detect some semblance of the Moon, which will somewhat resemble a very
dim and eerily illuminated mottled softball.
This chart shows the times of the end-stages of a total lunar eclipse taking place on Oct. 8, 2014.
A peculiar moonset
People
who live in those portions of the United States and Canada that are a
few hundred miles inland from the Eastern Seaboard should have a good
view of the Moon's emergence from the umbra somewhat later. The low,
partially eclipsed Moon in deep-blue twilight should offer a wide
variety of interesting scenic possibilities for both artists and
astrophotographers. From Toronto and points south through the eastern
Ohio Valley and into the Piedmont to the Florida Gulf Coast, a
peculiar-looking, waxing crescent moon with its cusps pointing downward
will appear to set beyond the western horizon.
Farther west,
across the western Great Lakes and down through the Deep South to the
Gulf of Mexico, the moon will appear to be notched on its lower right
side by the shadow.
Going still farther west, the Moon will go
down "full," but if the western horizon is haze-free, assiduous
observers from much of Minnesota, western Iowa, eastern portions of
Nebraska and Kansas as well as central sections of Oklahoma and Texas
might still be able to detect a faint penumbral stain on the moon's
lower right limb. Editor's Note: If you snap an
amazing picture of the Oct. 8 total lunar eclipse, you can send photos,
comments and your name and location to managing editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com. Joe
Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden
Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the
Farmer's Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera
meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookand Google+. Original article on Space.com.
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