Lunar Eclipse Sequence
On the morning of April 15 the moon was eclipsed by the earth for over an hour. It snowed here most of the evening but the clouds cleared shortly before it started. From midnight to 5am I took a picture every 20 minutes and assembled them into this sequence. At first the moon entered the earth's penumbra, and a subtle diffuse shadow began to appear. When the moon entered the umbra, It became much darker and slowly started turning a reddish orange. Sunlight being refracted through the earth's atmosphere is being cast upon the moon. It is essentially the light from all of earth's sunrises and sunsets that is lighting up the lunar surface. After being fully eclipsed for 1 hour and 18 minutes, the steps repeated in reverse. By the time the moon came out of eclipse, it was a lot lower in the sky which is why it looks darker and more yellow on the bottom right.
Date Taken: April 15, 2014
- Copyright
- Kevin Palmer
- Image Size
- 6728x4485 / 3.1MB
- Keywords
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kevin palmer, pentax k-5, night, sky, space, astronomy, astrophotography, moon, lunar eclipse, blood, red, shadow, umbra, penumbra, sequence, 17, dark, tax day, april, spring, 2014, illinois, banner marsh
- Contained in galleries
- Night Sky, Illinois, Lunar Eclipse