On Sunday, 7 Billion People Will See The Moon Turn Red. But Who Will See The Blue Band?

0
16

On Sunday, 7 Billion People Will See The Moon Turn Red. But Who Will See The Blue Band?

We literally can't wait for the eclipse this weekend! A record-breaking 7 billion people, from Oceania to the eastern coast of the Americas, will see the Moon’s disappearance inside the Earth’s shadow before turning red. As it is darkened by our planet, the Moon might gain some extra color: a blue band at the edge of the red. What gives?

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

A total lunar eclipse, as the one the planet is about to experience, is also known as a blood moon, as our natural satellite turns ruby red during the tens of minutes that it spends in the cone of our planet’s shadow. The reasons for the red and for the blue are connected, as we are about to see.

First, the Moon travels into the penumbra, the half shadow of the Earth, where only a small portion of sunlight is blocked. A lunar eclipse happens at full Moon, so the penumbral phase has a dimmer Moon than usual, but it is not dramatically different. Then the Moon enters the umbra, the full shadow of the Earth, and it is slowly covered, getting darker and darker. This is the partial phase. From beginning to end, this lasts over three hours.

ⓘ IFLScience is not responsible for content shared from external sites.

When the alignment is right, the Moon will be completely covered. That’s the total eclipse, usually lasting well over an hour. During this phase, we discover something important about the shadow of the Earth. The umbra is not black: it’s red. There is some sunlight that gets into the umbra, and it gets through it because it filters through the atmosphere.

The reason why the sky is blue during the day and red at dawn and dusk is the scattering of sunlight through the atmosphere. The same scattering sends some red light into the umbra. But not just red light. If the conditions are right, just before totality as the Moon gets redder, you can see a blue-violet band between the red and the white portion of the Moon.

The source of that band is ozone. The red comes from stratosphere scattering, and the light is passing through a lot of the stratosphere. Still, in the upper stratosphere, there’s the ozone layer. The layer absorbs some of the red, leaving turquoise light to pass through. Given the seasonal variability of the layer, as well as its changes due to atmospheric circulation and solar activity, the effect can be more or less pronounced.

Most of Asia, a sliver of East Africa, and Western Australia will get the full show. The rest of Africa, Australia, much of Europe, and the east coast of Brazil will get at least part of the totality and the partiality. You can check Time&Date.com for precise timings to see the eclipse at your location. To see the blue band, it’s best to look at the Moon in the minutes before totality or right after with binoculars or a small telescope.

Pesquisar
Categorias
Leia Mais
Technology
Keep 10TB of files private for life for A$421 with Internxt Cloud Storage
Internxt Cloud Storage TL;DR: Enjoy serious data security at...
Por Test Blogger7 2025-07-01 00:00:13 0 939
Food
Classic Sunday Dinners Your Grandparents Loved That Slowly Disappeared
Classic Sunday Dinners Your Grandparents Loved That Slowly Disappeared...
Por Test Blogger1 2025-08-08 01:00:05 0 334
Home & Garden
Is It Ever Okay to Clean Someone Else’s House While You're a Guest?
Is It Ever Okay to Clean Someone Else’s House While You're a Guest? Credit: Photo: Lazy_Bear /...
Por Test Blogger9 2025-05-29 12:00:25 0 2K
Technology
Power up your work and projects with Microsoft Office 2024, now $90 off
Microsoft Office 2024 TL;DR: Give your productivity a boost...
Por Test Blogger7 2025-06-20 15:00:19 0 1K
Technology
Aflac says cyberattack may have exposed customer data: What we know so far
Aflac says cyberattack may have exposed customer data The...
Por Test Blogger7 2025-06-23 19:00:13 0 1K