The UND SEMS project will present a live webcast of the total lunar eclipse happening late Friday night Dec. 9/early Saturday morning, Dec. 10. It will be the last total lunar eclipse visible for the next three years anywhere on Earth. See more
A total lunar eclipse will occur at night on December 10 (Saturday) and will be visible in Hong Kong if the weather is fine. A webcast of the event, covering the time the moon enters the umbra until it leaves, will be jointly provided by the Hong Kong Observatory and the Hong Kong Space Museum on the following web page from: www.weather.gov.hk/gts/hksm/astrophoto.htm Read more
Skywatchers in Australia, Asia and North America are gearing up for a total lunar eclipse on Saturday. This is the second total lunar eclipse this year and the last until 2014. This type of eclipse occurs when the Earth casts its shadow over the Moon. But indirect sunlight can still illuminate the Moon turning it a dramatic shade of red. The shadow starts falling at 11:33 GMT and ends after 17:30 GMT. The eclipse will last 51 minutes eight seconds. Read more
Can't see the eclipse from your area? Slooh, the online Space Camera, will broadcast a live feed of the total lunar eclipse from several locations, starting at 6:06 a.m. PST (9:06 a.m. EST). Observers in Australia and East Asia will have a prime view. The eclipsed moon will hang high in the middle of the night, local time. For Europe and Africa, the eclipsed moon will be visible during the early evening of Dec. 10. Read more
Tomorrow, December 10, the Full Moon will slide through planet Earth's shadow in a total lunar eclipse. The entire eclipse sequence, including 51 minutes of totality, will be visible from Asia and Australia, but moonwatchers in Europe and Africa will miss out on the beginning partial phases because for them, the eclipse will start before moonrise. In central and western North America the earlier phases of the eclipse will be in progress as the Moon sets Read more
People across the emirates and much of the world would see the second total lunar eclipse of the year on Saturday. Astronomers said the moon would become red at the time of total eclipse. The eclipse begins at 3.33pm (UAE time) and the entire eclipse will end 9.30pm. Read more