16 April 2014

The Blood Moon of April


Phil Plait has a Slate article about this month's lunar eclipse:
Did you watch the total lunar eclipse last night? Judging from my Twitter feed, a lot of people did! Chatter and pictures were flying around the internet as the silvery full Moon slowly drifted into the Earth’s shadow and turned a lovely shade of orange.
I took the photo above at about 01:21 Mountain time, local for me, about fifteen minutes after the total phase started. You can see the bright star Spica (the brightest star in the constellation of Virgo) just to the Moon’s lower right, and the much fainter star h Virginis just above and to the left of the Moon. It was fun to see fainter and fainter stars pop up as the Moon faded away, its bright glow no longer capable of washing them away.
Over the course of an hour and a half I took some video using my camera (a Canon T41 with a 250 mm lens), so, for your eyes’ and brain’s pleasure, here it is:



(I suggest making it big, if not full screen, and make sure you have the volume up for the first few seconds.) The coyotes really set the mood, didn’t they? Even though I was freezing my toes and fingers off, it was truly a wonderful and fun evening. I’ve seen a dozen or more total lunar eclipses, and I think my favorite part of this one was sharing my photos on Twitter in near-real time. People all over the world were excited to see it, and that is a big part of why I do this.
Due to the complex and subtle dance of gravity and geometry, there will be three more total lunar eclipses visible to the United States over the next year and half: in October of this year, and in April and September of 2015. While there won’t be any bright stars near the Moon for the eclipse in October, the planet Uranus will be only a degree away! That’ll make for some nice family portraits. And there’s also a partial solar eclipse two weeks later, on 23 October 2014, too! That’ll be a treat. And if you live in Australia there’s a nice annular solar eclipse on 29 April 2014; this is when the Moon is slightly smaller than the Sun and leaves a ring of Sun around the dark Moon. There was one of these last year and there were some fantastic pictures and video. I hope we’ll get more.
Rico says that, as usual, he missed it, since it happened in the middle of the night...

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