The Moon will turn an eerie shade of red for people in the western
hemisphere late Wednesday and early Thursday, recreating the eclipse
that saved Christopher Columbus more than five centuries ago.
In a lunar eclipse, the Sun, Earth and Moon are directly aligned and
the Moon swings into the cone of shadow cast by the Earth.
But the Moon does not become invisible, as there is still residual
light that is deflected towards it by our atmosphere. Most of this
refracted light is in the red part of the spectrum and as a result the
Moon, seen from Earth, turns a coppery, orange or even brownish hue.
Lunar eclipses have long been associated with superstitions and signs
of ill omen, especially in battle.
The defeat of the Persian king Darius III by Alexander the Great in the
Battle of Gaugamela in 331 BC was foretold by soothsayers when the Moon
turned blood-red a few days earlier.
And an eclipse is credited with saving the life of Christopher Columbus
and his crew in 1504.
Stranded on the coast of Jamaica, the explorers were running out of
food and faced with increasingly hostile local inhabitants who were
refusing to provide them with any more supplies.
Columbus, looking at an astronomical almanac compiled by a German
mathematician, realised that a total eclipse of the Moon would occur on
February 29, 1504.
He called the native leaders and warned them if they did not cooperate,
he would make the Moon disappear from the sky the following night.
The warning, of course, came true, prompting the terrified people to
beg Columbus to restore the Moon -- which he did, in return for as much
food as his men needed. He and the crew were rescued on June 29, 1504.
The Moon will be in total eclipse from 0301 GMT to 0351 GMT. This will
be visible east of the Rocky Mountains in North America, as well as in
all of Central and South America, West Africa and Western Europe. The
zenith of totality is close to French Guiana.
It will be in partial eclipse from 0143 GMT to 0301 GMT, visible west
of the Rockies and from the eastern Pacific, and from 0351 GMT to 0509
GMT, visible across the rest of Africa and Europe and much of South and
West Asia.
Under a partial eclipse, Earth's shadow, or umbra, appears to take a
"bite" out of the Moon.
The last total lunar eclipse took place on August 28 2007. The next
will take place on December 21 2010.
A solar eclipse happens when the Moon swings between the Earth and the
Sun.
+ Further details:
(http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/OH/OH2008.html);
(http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=38834);
and
(http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/highlights/15357796.html).
Original
Source
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