‘Beautiful’ lunar eclipse before dawn Tuesday

  • Peninsula Daily News news sources
  • Monday, August 27, 2007 7:33am
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Peninsula Daily News news sources

A lovely total lunar eclipse will be visible before dawn Tuesday morning as the Earth’s shadow darkens the bright full moon, and wherever skies are clear, it will be a time to look upward wide-eyed.

As of this morning, the PDN’s forecast service, AccuWeather, was predicting mostly clear skies for tonight’s full moon and early tomorrow’s lunar eclipse. For the latest forecast in North Olympic Peninsula towns, click on “Weather” at left.

Astronomers say the eclipse should be a beauty, but only people willing to stay up very late or set their alarm clocks for long after midnight will see it.

It will last for a full hour and a half, and during that time, the moon’s color could be anything from a dull and dusky red-brown to a reddish or even orange glow, depending on how much dust, pollution and mist is in the atmosphere.

A partial eclipse will start on the North Olympic Peninsula at 1:51 a.m. Tuesday and become total starting at 2:52 a.m. By 4:22 a.m., the total phase will be over, but then as the moon begins to emerge from Earth’s shadow, another partial phase will begin. The eclipse will end at 5:24 a.m., just as the sky lightens at dawn.

Lunar eclipses take place when the full moon and the sun are opposite each other in space, and the Earth in between them casts its shadow over the bright moon’s face. But even when the eclipse is total, some indirect sunlight manages to reach the moon. The earth’s atmosphere filters out most of the sun’s blue light, leaving only the red frequencies to light the lunar surface.

Binoculars would be a neat way to watch the event because they could make some of the bigger craters stand out as the Earth’s shadow begins to pass over the moon during the partial phase.

And watching the partial phase before totality should reveal something that the ancient Greeks discovered more than 2,000 years ago – that the Earth was round. So it wasn’t Magellan whose voyage first showed that. It was Aristotle, who died in 322 B.C.

In eclipses of the moon, Aristotle wrote, the outline of the Earth’s shadow is always curved, “and since it is the interposition of the earth that makes the eclipse, the form of this line will be caused by the form of the earth’s surface, which is therefore spherical.”

Fred Espenak, an astronomer at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., has calculated the dates and times of past lunar eclipses from 2000 B.C. to the present, and on through to A.D. 3000. In that 5,000-year span, he said, there will have been 3,505 total eclipses of the moon, including 230 during the 21st century, and 4,213 partial eclipses, including 58 in this century.

Eclipses, of course, have long been harbingers of doom or evil in mythology, and lunar eclipses are no exception – mostly involving the moon swallowed up by gods or demons or other creatures.

According to some records, the Maya of Central America, for example, believed that a jaguar ate the moon and could devour people, too, while in ancient China it was a three-legged toad. To the Mongols it was a dragon named Alkha.

In Egypt in the time of the Pharaohs, lunar eclipses were bad omens indeed, because the moon was supposed to be the “ruler of the stars,” and some ancient texts describe the entire sky as swallowing the moon during every eclipse.

While it wasn’t Columbus who showed the Earth was round, the Great Navigator did use a lunar eclipse to save his crew during his last voyage to America in 1503, according to Bryan Brewer, author of the book “Eclipse.”

After Columbus and his crew had been stranded on the island of Jamaica for months, the Indians finally refused to provide them with any food, Brewer said. But Columbus knew that a total eclipse of the moon would occur on Feb. 29, 1504. So on that night Columbus told his Indian neighbors that God was angry with them for not cooperating, and that God would make the moon disappear.

It did, and when the locals saw the eclipse ending, Columbus told them that God had forgiven them and the moon would return in full. It did, and Columbus and his crew ate heartily.

When it happens

Tuesday morning’s lunar eclipse will be viewable where skies are clear.

Partial eclipse begins1:51 a.m.

Total eclipse begins2:52 a.m.

Total eclipse ends4:22 a.m.

Partial eclipse ends5:24 a.m.

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