This phenomenon is known as a blood moon, but is basically just a total lunar eclipse. Tomorrow will be your last chance to see a total lunar eclipse until April, 2015. So don't miss it! The eclipse will begin at 4:17 a.m. EDT
The moon turns orange during a total lunar eclipse as seen from Golden, Colorado, Oct. 8, 2014. The total eclipse is the second of four over a two-year period that began April 15 and concludes on Sept. 28, 2015. The so-called tetrad is unusual because
NORFOLK, Va. (WAVY) — Did you see Wednesday morning's lunar eclipse? The clouds broke long enough to give stargazers a chance to see the historic event. 10 On Your Side was up early with some middle school students from Norfolk Collegiate.
MESSENGER was 107 million kilometers (66 million miles) from the Earth at the time of the lunar eclipse. The Earth is about five pixels across, and the Moon is just over one pixel across in the field of view of the spacecraft's narrow-angle camera
A lunar eclipse wowed skywatchers yesterday as it turned the moon dramatic shades of red and orange. The so-called “blood moon” appeared in the skies across North America, western parts of South America, Australia, and parts of South East Asia,.