Lunar Eclipse October 17 12:00 GMT 33
saskboy writes "Space Weather gives viewing instructions for tonight's partial lunar eclipse. 'According to folklore, October's full moon is called the "Hunter's Moon" or sometimes the "Blood Moon." It gets its name from hunters who tracked and killed their prey by autumn moonlight, stockpiling food for the winter ahead. The Hunter's Moon of 2005 is due on Oct. 17th.'"
More information about eclipses of the Moon (Score:4, Informative)
Harvest Moon [msu.edu]
It should also be noted that the only night a lunar eclipse can take place is on a full moon. Otherwise the earth cannot project a shadow onto the moon.
Now I finally ask my stupid, embarassing question (Score:2)
Yeah, yeah, I know about Google and Wikipedia.
Re:Now I finally ask my stupid,: answer (Score:5, Informative)
This can be seen with a flashlight and a few balls you have laying around. Put the flashlight in the middle, and shine it at the earth and moon balls. You'll see the side of the ball facing away from the sunlight will be dark. If the moon is to the left of the earth, at a 90 degree angle to the sun, then people on earth will only see half of the Moon.
An eclipse is the rare occurance of the moon being in [nearly] perfect alignment with the earth and the sun. Instead of the shadow being caused by a lack of sunlight being available, to shine on the surface, it's the earth that is passing in front of the moon.
There's also something called "earthshine" [slashdot.org had a story the last week on this]. It's sunlight from the earth that lights up the moon when it would otherwise be completely dark in a region that has no direct sunlight.
Re:Now I finally ask my stupid answer (Score:2)
Wow. Have these people never looked at the moon during the daytime?
Or, to the GP, has he not noticed that solar eclipses occur at new moon?
We see the sun with a bite of blackness.
BTW why do you call it a "flashlight" ? It doesn't flash.
Re:Now I finally ask my stupid answer (Score:1)
Re:More information about eclipses of the Moon (Score:2, Informative)
Re:More information about eclipses of the Moon (Score:2)
The full moon we are experiencing now is the Hunter's Moon.
I'm looking forward to next month's, AKA the Beaver Moon.
and a blue moon (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:and a blue moon (Score:2)
ta-da-dum.
Welcome to modern times. (Score:2, Interesting)
This is the equivalant to a FOX news "news *ahem*" story.
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:5, Insightful)
People get excited about things that happen only once a year all the time. *ahem birthdays, anniversaries, Christmas*
Astronomers like any old excuse to get out and look up at things that don't happen every day. The fact that we can predict these things when most people don't know the difference between a protractor and a compass, is, well, impressive. Don't spoil the astronomer's good time by saying it doesn't matter. Lots of things depend on the moon, and having more people focussing on the same good thing at the same time is bound to have positive effects.
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:1)
Well, maybe they do, but I'm pretty sure nobody wants to see it in that case.
Funny thing, though. I was just commenting the other night about how amazing it is to see such bright stars (and so many of them!) int he night sky here in Broomfield, Colorado. I'm used to Portland (Oregon), where you either ha
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:3, Insightful)
We can put a man on the moon; we can have a woman in the senate; we can talk to our mothers living two thousand miles away in Chicago while we shop for groceries in Los Angeles; We can manipulate DNA on scales of billionths of an inch; network television regularly offers believable portrayals of catastrophic disasters and explosions, not to mention news programs can take us to the other side of the world each and every night; Fermat's Last T
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:2, Informative)
Consider the distances involved: a 12800km wide object is almost completely blocking the Sun from reaching a 3500km wide object that is 400000km away. The fact that this happens at all is the reason some of us are excited.
And although this is a partial eclipse, it's going to last more than "a few seconds". Probably closer to an hour...
HA! (Score:2)
Major League Baseball playoffs: 1
Major celestial coincidence: 0
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:1)
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:2)
It is also very exciting to see something odd happen to the Sun, which normally stands unassailed in the sky. I suppose it is a similar sort of fascination to seeing the Twi
Re:Welcome to modern times. (Score:2)
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Evan
DARN YOU CALIFORNIANS!!! (Score:1)
You get to see the whole friggin eclipse! Meanwhile, those of us less fortunate ones on the East Coast have to look for it at moonset!
Re:DARN YOU CALIFORNIANS!!! (Score:2)
Never look directly at a lunar eclipse.... (Score:4, Funny)
Hah! You were poised to flame me for confusing the solar eclipses with lunar eclipses, weren't you? Admit it!
I need a question answered thats been bugging me. (Score:1)
Re:I need a question answered thats been bugging m (Score:1)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon [wikipedia.org]
Re:I need a question answered thats been bugging m (Score:3, Informative)
In the common expression "dark side of the moon, "dark" means "unknown", because we can never see it so we have no idea what is on it. It doesn't refer to whether the sun is shining on it.
Re:I need a question answered thats been bugging m (Score:2)
"There is no dark side of the moon, really...as a matter of fact it's all dark."
(from Pink Floyd, natch.)
Re:I need a question answered thats been bugging m (Score:2)
Bunch of craters named after Russians, IIRC.
Now, if you'll excuse me I have to watch The Wizard of Oz with this cool new soundtrack...
Scuttle Monkey is a dork (Score:1, Troll)
Tell me, will this momentus event be preceeded by a sunset and folowed by a sunrise?
(sign)
Saw it (Score:2)
It was a partial lunar eclipse, not the full monty. The max size of the shadow of the Earth on the Moon was predicted to happen around 8 AM EST, and really just a small bite at that. Moon set was about 7:45 AM EST, local time. Oddly, though one might expect the or
Yay!! I'll finally get to see a Lunar Eclipse! (Score:2)
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