A total eclipse of the Moon occurs during the night of Wednesday,
February 20/21, 2008. The entire event is visible from South America
and most of North America (on Feb. 20) as well as Western Europe,
Africa, and western Asia (on Feb. 21). During a total lunar eclipse,
the Moon's disk can take on a dramatically colorful appearance from
bright orange to blood red to dark brown and (rarely) very dark gray.
An eclipse of the Moon can only take place at Full Moon, and only if
the Moon passes through some portion of Earth's shadow. The shadow is
actually composed of two cone-shaped parts, one nested inside the
other. The outer shadow or penumbra is a zone where Earth blocks some
(but not all) of the Sun's rays. In contrast, the inner shadow or umbra
is a region where Earth blocks all direct sunlight from reaching the
Moon.
If only part of the Moon passes through the umbra, a partial eclipse is
seen. However, if the entire Moon passes through the umbral shadow,
then a total eclipse of the Moon occurs. For more information on how,
what, why, where and when of lunar eclipses, see the special web page
lunar eclipses for beginners.
Lunar Eclipse Diagrams
The following diagrams show the Moon's path through Earth's shadows
(higher resolution versions of the above figure). The times of major
stages of the eclipse are given for a number of time zones in North
America. Please choose the diagram for your own time zone. Each diagram
is a GIF file with a size of about 100k.
Times and Phases of the Total Lunar Eclipse of February 20/21, 2008
From start to finish, February's lunar eclipse lasts about three hours
and twenty-six minutes (not including the penumbral phases which are
very difficult to see). The partial eclipse begins as the Moon's
eastern edge slowly moves into the Earth's umbral shadow. During the
partial phases, it takes just over an hour for the Moon's orbital
motion to carry it entirely within the Earth's dark umbra. The color
and brightness of the totally eclipsed Moon can vary considerably from
one eclipse to another. Dark eclipses are caused by volcanic gas and
dust which filters and blocks much of the Sun's light from reaching the
Moon. But since no major volcanic eruptions have taken place recently,
the Moon will probably take on a vivid red or orange color during the
total phase. After the total phase ends, it is once again followed by a
partial eclipse as the Moon gradually leaves the umbral shadow.
The total phase of a lunar eclipse is called totality. At this time,
the Moon is completely immersed within the Earth's dark umbral shadow.
During the February 20 eclipse totality will last just under 50
minutes. This is quite a bit less than the last total lunar eclipse (
August 28, 2007) which lasted 90 minutes.
The major phases of the eclipse occur as follows (all times are GMT or
Greenwich Mean Time). The partial eclipse commences with first umbral
contact at 01:43 GMT. Totality begins at 03:01 GMT and lasts until
03:51 GMT. The partial phases end at 05:09 GMT. Eclipse times for time
zones in the United States and Canada are shown in the following table.
Original
Source
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
||||
|
|
||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)