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BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
Tuesday, 18 January, 2000, 13:01 GMT
Moon to blush bright red
By BBC News Online Science Editor Dr David Whitehouse
A total eclipse of the Moon on Friday may cause the satellite to turn bright red or even vanish completely.
A total lunar eclipse is not all that rare and unlike a total solar eclipse,
when the Earth enters the Moon's shadow, can be seen from an entire
hemisphere of our planet.
We're kind of expecting that this eclipse will be very bright and probably
very bright red
Brad Schaefer, Yale astronomer
It might be a regular event, but it has, nevertheless, always captured the imagination.
In ancient Egyptian mythology, the Moon was a boat sailing across the
heavens attacked once a month by a huge sow that caused the moon to die only
to be born again. But sometimes the sow swallowed the moon entirely and then
disgorged it - that was what we now call a total lunar eclipse.
Two and a half thousand years ago, the curved shape of the Earth's shadow as
it traversed across the Moon during an eclipse was said to have convinced
Pythagoras, the Greek astronomer and mathematician, that the Earth was round.
Lunar tables
Christopher Columbus used tables of the times of lunar eclipses to impress
the natives of Jamaica when they refused to provide food.
According to his diary, on 29 February, 1504, Columbus warned that he would
cause the moon to disappear because his god was angry. When this duly
happened, the terrified inhabitants gave him all the food he needed.
This lunar eclipse will be visible from the UK in the early morning of Friday 21 January. It will also be visible from the whole of north and south
America, and from much of Europe and Africa.
The Earth's shadow will first become visible on the Moon when the partial
phase of the eclipse begins at 0301 GMT. The total phase of the eclipse
occurs between 0405 and 0522 GMT. The eclipse then becomes partial
again, finishing completely at 0625 GMT.
When it takes place, the full moon will be in the constellation Cancer,
quite low in the western sky (about 30 degrees above the horizon for
observers in the UK).
The Moon usually remains visible during a total eclipse, becoming a shade of
copper-brown or orange. This is caused by sunlight passing through the
Earth's atmosphere being deflected towards the Moon.
Red colouring
If the Earth had no atmosphere, its shadow would be completely black and the
Moon would disappear from view. The Moon's colour during an eclipse can vary
considerably according to the amount of dust in the Earth's atmosphere at
the time.
"We're kind of expecting that this eclipse will be very bright and probably
very bright red," said Yale University astronomer Brad Schaefer.
Moon facts
Diameter - 3,476 km
Mass -7.35e22 kg
Earth distance - 384,400 km
Orbit - 27.322 (Earth days)
"This same thing happens to us (on Earth) during sunsets," he added. "When
the Sun has just set, you look off toward the direction of sunset and the
same physics is going on ... and so what you're seeing on the Moon is
basically sunset colours."
The colour of the Moon during a lunar eclipse can also be influenced by the amount of dust thrown up into the stratosphere by volcanoes. Big eruptions, like the blast of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991, can turn the moon so dark that it is almost impossible to spot during an eclipse.
But since there has not been such an eruption recently, astronomers are
forecasting a deep red lunar disk. No special observing equipment should be
necessary, but a pair of binoculars might be helpful. Getting away from
streetlights is also a good idea.
A lunar eclipse holds no great surprises for scientists but it is a wonder of
nature available to all and an intriguing example of the clockwork of the
Universe.
Related to this story:
Moon probe threatened by eclipse
(26 Jul 99 | Sci/Tech)
Signs and wonders
(24 Aug 99 | Eclipse99)
Internet Links:
Total Lunar Eclipse (Nasa)
Lunar Eclipse Photo Gallery (Fred Espenak)
Eclipse 99 (BBC News)
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
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