Total Lunar Eclipse 148
v@mp writes "I noticed a few posts today about space, which reminded me that there will be a total lunar eclipse in North America and Western Europe on Jan. 20. The moon will turn a deep red color for little over an hour around 8 p.m. on the west coast and 11 p.m. on the east coast. I'll see you all "under a blood red sky"--U2. "
WRONG! WRONG! WRONG! (Score:1)
The real reason they will not be able to see the full eclipse is because it is SUMMER down there and WINTER up here!
Sheesh!
Everybody knows that the full eclipse only happens in Winter.
On a more serious note. Wasn't there a South Park episode about a full lunar eclipse?
The excitement (Score:1)
A GIANT SPACE DRAGON IS GOING TO TRY TO EAT THE MOON TONIGHT, AND YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT ALL THE EXCITEMENT IS ABOUT?!?
I gotta get out more (Score:1)
Hmmmm, I wonder if seeing a full lunar eclipse will make you petrified?
Not chromatic abberation, I'm afraid (Score:1)
If c.a. were responsible you would expect the hues of eclipses to change as the moon's ecentric orbit carries it closer to and further from the Earth. They don't
The reddish color of lunar eclipses is instead caused by (Riemann?, Mie?) scattering of light as it passes through the atmosphere. To a half-assed approximation, blue light is preferentially scattered to the sides, leaving more of the red to continue ahead and illuminate the moon.
This is exactly the effect that causes sunny skies to be blue and sunrises and sunsets to be red. In fact you can think of the redish eclipsed moon as being illuminated by the light of all the sunrises and all the sunsets all around the day/night line. Not an original thought but sort of a pretty image.
What this means is that the color of the eclipsed moon does depend on 'pollution', just as the color of sunsets does, but the pollutants in question are mostly high stratospheric aresols of volcanic dust. In fact, this will be one of the first 'normal' eclipses in quite a while, since most of the gunge from Pinatubo et al has finally settled out. Just like we're no longer seeing those nasty 'tangerine' sunsets we've had for so many years.
-- csh, who's too shy to get an account.
Note: Above description of scattering is a big ol' hand wave. If anyone gives a fsck post and I'll grab a reference and get the details right.
uhh, we did (Score:1)
I do hope we get a break in the clouds tonight. The beginning of this week was perfectly clear, now the clouds are in and it's raining. CRAP. But it's supposed to clear off again, so maybe there's hope.
I just got in from seeing the eclipse! (Score:1)
It was amazing! I think totality was earlier than 11 pm though because when I came out, a bright crescent was appearing on the right-hand side.
It didn't go totally dark, the moon was a kind of dark amber colour. Like the color of stout when held up to a light.
NJViking
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:1)
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:1)
Re:farkin' clouds (Score:1)
Time for me to buy an airplane!
Re:Red Moon (Score:1)
> However, I can't believe that the entire
> northern hemisphere has got all excited
> over something that isn't at least a -little-
> unusual, so can someone fill me in on what
> makes this different?
If you think this is bad, you should have seen it when our calendar rolled over from 1999 to 2000 years!
Re:Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:1)
(try reading the book instead of half-remembering it.
Re:What are you doing online? Get OUTSIDE! (Score:1)
It is so cold, I think I'm going to freeze solid into some kind of statue. You know, like I'm petrified.
Northeast storm will block view (Score:1)
Intellicast.com [intellicast.com] is the best online source for weather information, especially stuff like the lunar eclipse. The storm will not let up until tomorrow.
On the StarCast page [intellicast.com] they list the viewing conditions [intellicast.com] for tonight's lunar eclipse.
--Ivan, weenie NT4 user: bite me!
Thank You Weather Gods!!! (Score:1)
Regardless, all is clear up here in northeastern Alberta!!! The moon has risen and I have my camera all ready.
[OT] Re:It's my birthday. Coincidence? (Score:1)
Re: Chromatic abberation? (Score:1)
What does the earth look like when viewed from the moon during a total lunar eclipse ?
Has anyone ever seen a photo of that ?
Re:Lunar Eclipse Party! (Score:1)
Blood red? (Score:1)
Oh yeah, and we need some forum to help decide what to do with the numpties who post all this crap at the start of articles... ugh....
--Remove SPAM from my address to mail me
Under a blood red sky? (Score:1)
Actually this line is better:
"I'll see you again when the stars fall from the sky and the moon turns red over One Tree Hill" - U2 'One Tree Hill'
That's probably an even more ominous, religiously overtoned and appropriate verse/song. Definatly one of the best U2 songs ever
Just saw it in fargo ND (Score:1)
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:1)
Re:Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:1)
Revelation 2:13
---------
To hell with you, I never liked you, you are no friend of mine...
Interesting image . . . (Score:1)
Re:The excitement (Score:1)
Re:farkin' clouds (Score:1)
are you a csh'r?
Re:Red Moon (Score:1)
Re:Hundreds of lunar and solar eclipses since Bibl (Score:1)
Re:Hundreds of lunar and solar eclipses since Bibl (Score:1)
Re:Loons and such (Score:1)
Re:And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:1)
Re:Interesting image . . . (Score:1)
wow. (Score:1)
I too think it looks like an eye ball. For the first time in my life, the moon actually looks 3-D! Usually it looks too flat for a ball.
Re:Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:1)
The moon-men call it a solar eclipse. (Score:1)
Re:Northeast storm will block view (Score:1)
i love full moons let alone eclipses of it
--
dead angel
i am strange people. -me
Re:Blood red? (Score:1)
Of course, my sources have been incorrect before.
-Vel
South America too (Score:1)
Under a Killing Moon (Score:1)
Ah, that brings back memories. That game kicked ass. Ran kinda slow on my 386 though.
[OT] Re:[OT] Re:It's my birthday. Coincidence? (Score:1)
Go figure.
-Jordan Henderson
Re:Under a Killing Moon (Score:1)
-
Volcanic Ash (Score:1)
Volcanic Ash (Score:1)
Re:Remember your moon viewing goggles! (Score:1)
;)
eclipse web cam (Score:1)
Re:Hundreds of lunar and solar eclipses since Bibl (Score:1)
Re: it would look like a solar eclipse (Score:1)
A longer answer than you needed, really. :-) I don't know if anyone has ever been on the moon during an eclipse, but I doubt it for various reasons. Whatever.
Re:And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:1)
Oh it's much worse than that. A tight correlation of mean terrestrial temperature with overall solar activity has been observed over time scales from months to millenia, but it gets overlooked in favor of computer modelling of greenhouse gas production that ignores water (the predominate greenhouse "gas" in our atmosphere) and has a cause-and-effect problem (the temperature goes up decades before the CO/CO2 buildup is supposed to have taken place, and then levels off) that's skipped over.
I'm starting to understand how Galileo felt.
Re:I just got in from seeing the eclipse! (Score:1)
Eclipse times (Score:1)
One note regarding the July 16 eclipse: though the partial phases will be visible throughout much of the western U.S., only those on the coast of California will witness totality, and only for a few minutes at most before moonset.
CSH (Score:1)
farkin' clouds (Score:1)
Teen Wolves (Score:1)
Chromatic abberation? (Score:1)
Loons and such (Score:1)
Re:Not to sound religiously aetheist... (Score:1)
Don't get me wrong. I think it's a valuable text, in the same way the Greek Myths are valuable. I also suspect Christ actually existed. Whether he was a divine being... I wouldn't know.
Eclipse Eschmips (Score:1)
Connah
Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:1)
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson
NPS Internet Solutions, LLC
"Get your domain name for only $45" [npsis.com]
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson
NPS Internet Solutions, LLC
Thanks fellas (Score:2)
Re: it would look like a solar eclipse (Score:2)
Actually, it probably wouldn't look like a solar eclipse, or at least not the kind that we're used to seeing pictures.
One of the reasons solar eclipses (on Earth) look so spectacular comes from a rather interesting little coincidence. The moon and the sun subtend nearly the same solid angle (they appear to be about the same size from Earth). So during a solar eclipse, the moon blocks out the surface of the sun nearly perfectly, allowing you to see solar prominences as well as the sun's corona. Also, there are such things as annular eclipses which occur when the moon is a little further away (and therefore appears smaller) and as a result the moon doesn't completely block out the sun as seen from earth, instead the sun appears as an annulus around the moon.
On the moon, what you would get is the reverse of an annular eclipse, the earth will appear much larger than the sun, and will completely cover it during totallity. However, sunlight refracting through the earth's atmosphere could be just as spectacular a sight...but I don't think anyone's seen such a thing. I suspect that some of the sun's corona might be visible as well, but I haven't done the calculation, so I don't really know for sure.
Re:The excitement (Score:2)
Red Moon (Score:2)
So it's going to be a bit brighter, this time. That, in itself, doesn't sound particularly exciting.
However, I can't believe that the entire northern hemisphere has got all excited over something that isn't at least a -little- unusual, so can someone fill me in on what makes this different?
Not only there (Score:2)
11PM Argentina, 10PM brazil, midnight Chile, other countries adjust as needed.
Re:What are you doing online? Get OUTSIDE! (Score:2)
Hot grits in the pants, naked, and petrified. What more could one ask for?
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Black sun, red moon (Score:2)
Whoa, a solar eclipse and a lunar eclipse at the same time! It almost makes me wish for the end of the world, just so that I can see what it's like to live in a different geometric system.
"The moon is red and bleeding
The sun is burned and black
The book of life is silent
No turning back" - Iron Maiden
---
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
And, as you state, it *is* the same moon, it's just upside down
Not really (Score:2)
hundreds (if not more than a thousand) total lunar eclipses in the past 2000 years, I'm not all that worried. Assuming it stays clear, this will be my fourth total lunar eclipse. I'm all for them!
Eric
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
Eric
Hot grits but no pants (Score:2)
I beg to differ. Hot grits with no pants is just not the same.
To explain, I must necessarily digress. Perhaps you have heard of the fine old sport of Ferret Legging [cmu.edu]. If you have not, do yourself a favor, and follow the link.When you return, the connection should be clear. Hot grits with no pants is no substitute for hot grits down the pants. Or it that hot grits is no substitute for a ferret? Or that one must never pour hot grits on a ferret down one's pants?
Oh hell. Now you've got me all hot, flustered, and confused.
I'm going to go back out and watching the eclipse. Besides, Natalie Portman is complaining that she's getting cold out there, all alone.
What are you doing online? Get OUTSIDE! (Score:2)
Amazing!
If you aren't lucky enough to have a computer set up on the balcony, from which you can see the eclipse taking place (as some of us are), get the heck off Slashdot and go outside! It's worth it, if the sky is clear where you are, no matter how cold and windy it is out there.
What a fantastic show!
--Ravenfeather, freezing off his fingers to bring you this content-free news report.Re:What are you doing online? Get OUTSIDE! (Score:2)
Sure...you'll get so cold that you're practically PETRIFIED...
But just pour HOT GRITS down your pants, and you'll be warm and toasty in no time!
--Ravenfeather, freezing in the cold wind, typing in gloves, watching the eclipse, and thinking the universe would be a truly wonderful place even without Natalie Portman, Hot Grits, and Linux.Time Zones (Score:2)
Cloudy in Europe (Score:2)
Exact times (Score:2)
The exact times are:
The times are given un universal coordinated time and apply to 2000/01/21. Add or substract your time zone correction.
The time, of course, does not depend on the place. The eclipse is visible from wherever on Earth it happens to be night at the time in question. (Naturally, since there is an eclipse, the moon is full, so it is night precisely when the moon is visible, atmospheric perturbations excluded.)
Re:Time Zones (Score:2)
GMT is what it says it is: the mean solar time on Greenwich meridian (after correction of the Earth's nutation and pole displacement). It is also called UT1, or Universal Time. This time standard is obsolete and deprecated, because it is an astronomical standard, and is subject to many irregularities.
The current time standard is UTC, or Universal Time Coordinated, which is defined as offset by a certain number of seconds with respect to TAI (the international atomic time, maintained by averaging a number of atomic clocks around the world), currently UTC=TAI-32s. This offset is changed occasionally by inserting a leap second in UTC, so that the difference UTC-UT1 never exceeds 0.9s in absolute value (currently it is around -0.3s).
For nearly all real-life practices, UT1 and UTC can be assimilated under the general name ``Greenwich Mean Time'' or (more correctly) ``Universal Time'', but the correct term is ``Universal Time Coordinated''.
See this page I wrote [eleves.ens.fr] for more information.
Re:Time Zones (Score:2)
Actually, the time lords are rather the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures [www.bipm.fr] (International Weights and Measures Bureau) for TAI (atomic time) and the International Earth Rotation Service [obspm.fr] for UTC (who make the decision of when to add leap seconds for example).
Granted, on last reading, the USNO master clock was only five nanoseconds fast of UTC, as computed by the BIPM (by averaging many different atomic clock's reading of UTC).
Correction? (Score:2)
At least according to the Associated Press [yahoo.com], folks on the west coast will also be able to view the total eclipse on July 16. I'm less likely to go with the AP on this one, though.
Not different, but still exciting (Score:2)
People usually hate feeling small, but they still get a big kick out of experiencing the wonders of the cosmos (cue Carl Sagan and his billions of stars). People have been awed by eclipses, be they solar or lunar, for millennia. Think of it as a chance to poop on Aristotle's grave regarding his immutable heavens and heavenly bodies.
At least it's something more worthwhile than a mere date roll-over in an arbitrary calendar.
Re:And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:2)
The USA creates 80% of the worlds pollutants, now I'm sorry but whichever way you look at it that can't be good, and is provenly unnecessary. If every other country can manage to cut down the so can the USA, and there is no reason for them not to do so.
I do however agree with the point that Global Warming is a catchphrase and still has no real basis in fact, but that doesn't excuse causing massive increases in asthma, cancers and other illnesses by pumping out tonnes of carcinogens into the atmosphere. You can't just say 'well global warming isn't proven so why do anything about pollution' it so much more complicated than that.
Cloudy in Seattle (Score:2)
And I've got a rooftop waiting to be used, with a fairly clear view of the night sky
Re:And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:2)
Now, we could easily get rid of all polution overnight. Just turn off all the factories, power plants, and automobiles, and, poof, no more pollution. That's not going to happen, of course, because the result would be widespread devastation. The point is that rational public policy demands a balance between protecting our environment, on the one hand, and protecting our economy on the other. Ridiculous overstatements about the amount of pollution (even if they are probably based more in ignorance than in malice, which I think is likely here) do not further the cause of rational policymaking, and the original poster was right to condemn them.
Finally, just out of curiousity:
I'm confused. Is the "*grin*" supposed to cause this not to be a rude comment? If so, it doesn't work, in my opinion.
-r
Re:Time Zones (Score:2)
--
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
Re:WRONG! WRONG! WRONG! (Score:2)
Re:Lunar eclipses explained (Score:2)
Please ignore me for the rest of the day.
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
For fine timelapse of a dramatically moving subject I can just use multiple exposures with a shorter exposure time. Locking the shutter open only works for very, very fast action. But at 1 minute intervals I don't need either. Shoot off 24 on a timer, swap the body out for a new one, change the film, come back in twenty minutes and repeat. I'd have to rewind the following mechanism on my antique telescope every half hour anyway.
The only real difference is that I get the expensive hard copy by default, which I like, and you get an inexpensive digital one.
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
Re:A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:2)
[OT] Re:Not to sound religiously aetheist... (Score:2)
I don't know. The way I heard it, the Bible has undergone tons of revision. For example, during the days of the Roman Empire, I know several alterations were made to make the Bible more consistent. I think that's how the concept of the trinity came about.
Ummmm...where did you hear that? Most of what I've read confirms that the accuracy of modern Bible translations (e.g. NIV or NASB) is exceptionally good. They're based on Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic manuscripts that remained accurately copied for hundreds of years. For example...
"The impact of this discovery [the Dead Sea Scrolls] is vividly illustrated in the virtual duplication of the Isaiah scroll (dated 125 B.C.) in the Masoretic text of Isaiah (A.D. 916) written 1000 years later. This demonstrates the unusual accuracy of the copyists of the Scripture over a thousand year period. Of the 166 words in Isaiah 53, only seventeen letters have been questioned. Ten of these letters are a matter of spelling, which does not affect the sense. Four more letters are minor stylistic changes, such as a conjunction. The remaining three letters comprise the word "light", which is added in verse 11 and does not greatly affect the meaning. Thus, in one chapter of 166 words, there is only one word (three letters) in question after a thousand years of transmission-and this word does not significantly change the meaning of the passage. Comparisons of other Bible passages show even closer duplications." (from this site [perimeter.org])
While the word "Trinity" is never seen in the Bible, the concept is evident throughout the N.T. Some (me included) would argue that it's evident in the O.T. as well, but that's going WAY off topic! Suffice it to say, many liberal scholars try to argue that since the word isn't in the Bible, the Trinity is an invention of man.
I also suspect Christ actually existed. Whether he was a divine being... I wouldn't know.
That's good, since historically there's no question that there existed a person name Jesus of Nazareth, who was called the Christ. So the question remains, is Christ a divine being? I am convinced He is. But investigate for yourself, the answer is there!
And in a vain (too late!) attempt to bring this back on-topic, there are many who bend some of the biblical prophecies to try to determine the time/place for some events. The blood-red moon is a sign pointing to the final judgment, but a red moon is not an uncommon event (rare, but not once-in-a-lifetime). So, yes, this lunar eclipse might be a sign of the end. Then again, it might not. Regardless, I'm ready!
JimD
JimD
Re:And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:2)
I wouldn't even call it a wall. It's a fluid region of gas that changes depending on season and weather conditions that acts as a filter for UV-B and other radiation.
"experts" can't even explain the causes of the ice ages.
Nice straw man. What does meteorological history have to do with current climatic changes caused by emitted chemicals? Have a look at this [brs.gov.au] to learn how ozone loss happens.
California wants to do just this to pretty much *anything* with a gas engine in it.
Also look at to learn [scorecard.org] that California is in the top bracket of states ranked by hazardous air pollutants.
a few percent less thick a "hole"?
A few percent less than what? Measured when? The actual value ranges from 11-30% during the year, measured by deviation from the levels during the 1960s.
Over Australia, according to the 1997 State Of the Environment report [nsw.gov.au], ozone levels hit about 89%. This means "the increase in erythemal UV-B radiation (the most damaging for plants and animals) is expected to be about 13%". Don't forget that zooplankton and phytoplankton have no protection from UV-B. If they start dying, the ocean has big problems.
Australia has the highest incidence of skin cancer in the world, both malignant and non-malignant.
Don't laugh.
I'm not.
Re: Chromatic abberation? (Score:3)
Light is bent (refracted) as it passes through a lens. Different wavelengths of light are bent at different angles. Red bends more than blue. The earth's atmosphere acts as a lens. yellow/green/blue/violet light razing the earth during the eclipse are not refracted very much and do not strike the shadowed moon. Orange Red light is bent much more, enough to shine on the eclipsed moon. Hence the moon looks red. This has nothing to do with the content of the atmosphere so the redness is not caused by smog. Cromatic abberation is why telescopes with lenses (refractors) hav an upper limit to how sharply you can focus on an object. because the focal length is different for different colors. Reflector telescopes can form much sharper images because the angle of reflection off of a mirror does NOT change with wavelength.
And great opportunity for the spin doctors! (Score:3)
A great digicam photo opportunity (Score:3)
--Jim
Lunar eclipses explained (Score:3)
Similarly, your position with respect to the Equator will not change the fact that the entire moon will lie within Earth's shadow. That's what is required for a full lunar eclipse.
People in Eastern Europe (different longitude) will not see the eclipse simply because the moon will have set for them already. Remember, if the eclipse starts at 10pm, with totality onset at 11pm, this is 3am and 4am GMT, respectively. Eastern European sites are at GMT + several hours. It will already be daytime, and since a full moon rises at sunset, and sets at sunrise, these people will miss out.
I can agree with your assessment that there is only one moon, however.
Eric
Re:Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:3)
the bible (and indeed many/all religious texts) weave fact into fiction and back around again. Lunar eclipses aren't rare. Probably someone knew about blood red eclipses and thought it sounded pretty good thrown in in the religious sense.
Read Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein. That's my bible
--Remove SPAM from my address to mail me
Re:Not to sound religiously fanatical... (Score:3)
Actually, it's the book of Revelation.
Singular.
"I watched as he opened the sixth seal. There
was a great earthquake. The sun turned black
like sackcloth made of goat hair, the whole moon
turned blood red" - Revelation 6:12
"The sun will be turned to darkness and the
moon to blood before the coming of the great
and dreadful day of the Lord." - Joel 2:31
FYI -- Astronomical and Calendar Info (Score:3)
--
Re:Blood red? (Score:3)
your bit about volcanic ash, though, is presumably partially correct -- within certain limits, presumably more dust means more scattering (and hence a stronger red color, since the red component isn't affected nearly as much).
It's my birthday. Coincidence? (Score:4)
Astrophotography guidelines (Score:4)
Sicne the Moon is in Gemini, you're in a good situation because you can take longer exposures without getting trails. For a 50mm shot, my guess is anything under 15-20 sec should give you no trails (using a narrower-angle lens will decrease this tremendously!), but even when eclipsed the Moon might be still bright enough that you'll be using very short exposures. (Unfortunately my copy of Gordon's book is at the office, and I"m not!). Of course if you're using a telescope with tracking, it's not as much of an issue. I've only done still tripod imaging (which is fun all by itself). But be forewarned, even though the Moon looks HUGE, with a 50 mm lens, the actual lunar disk will only have a diameter of about 3 mm on the film!
Dickinson and Newton [amazon.com] recommend for 400 speed film (I recommend SLIDE film over print film!) at f/8, an exposure time of 1/250 s at partial phases (after ingress), to 1/4 s during ingress near totality, to 1 to 10 seconds once totality starts, up to 100s for the deepest parts of the eclipse (and probably if the Moon is at perigee). Of course for exposures that are VERY long, you'll need to track the Moon to offset sidereal motion. But at a declination of 20 degrees North, as I said you can probably get up to 15 seconds without too much distortion (for a 50 mm lens).
Of course, in Boston, it's snowing.
But the next lunar eclipse visible in North America is less than a year away (Jan. 9, 2001).
Remember your moon viewing goggles! (Score:5)
More frighteningly, lunar eclipses emit deadly "lunar rays" which affect your brain and make you stupid enough to try to watch it through a welder's mask instead of binoculars.