Total Lunar Eclipse on December 10, 2011
A total lunar eclipse on December 10, 2011, will be the final eclipse of the year. This will be second of two lunar eclipses in 2011.
Animation showing the moon's passage through the earth's partial (outer circle) and full shadows (inner circle) in relation to Universal time. Based on information from NASA.
Can I see the eclipse?
The December 10 lunar eclipse will be seen from Alaska, northern Canada, Australia, New Zealand, central Asia and eastern Asia. Viewers in most of North America and Hawaii will see the moonset still in eclipse.
Central and eastern Asia is where the eclipse can be best viewed and photographed.
People on the west coast of the United States and Canada will see the beginning of totality just as the moon disappears below the western horizon. Viewers on the east coast will not see the start of the umbral eclipse before moonset.
When will the Eclipse Occur?
A total lunar eclipse appeals to eclipse enthusiasts. ©iStockphoto.com/Matthew Meier
The eclipse’s total phase lasts for 51 minutes. It starts at at 11:33:36 Universal Time (UT), with totality starting at 14:06:16 UT.
The point of the greatest eclipse occurs at 14:31:49 UT. The umbral eclipse magnitude will reach 1.11 at this point.
Totality ends at 14:57:24 UT, and the entire eclipse finally ends at 17:29:57 UT.
A total lunar eclipse on December 10, 2011, will be the final eclipse of the year. This will be second of two lunar eclipses in 2011.
Animation showing the moon's passage through the earth's partial (outer circle) and full shadows (inner circle) in relation to Universal time. Based on information from NASA.
Can I see the eclipse?
The December 10 lunar eclipse will be seen from Alaska, northern Canada, Australia, New Zealand, central Asia and eastern Asia. Viewers in most of North America and Hawaii will see the moonset still in eclipse.
Central and eastern Asia is where the eclipse can be best viewed and photographed.
People on the west coast of the United States and Canada will see the beginning of totality just as the moon disappears below the western horizon. Viewers on the east coast will not see the start of the umbral eclipse before moonset.
When will the Eclipse Occur?
A total lunar eclipse appeals to eclipse enthusiasts. ©iStockphoto.com/Matthew Meier
The eclipse’s total phase lasts for 51 minutes. It starts at at 11:33:36 Universal Time (UT), with totality starting at 14:06:16 UT.
The point of the greatest eclipse occurs at 14:31:49 UT. The umbral eclipse magnitude will reach 1.11 at this point.
Totality ends at 14:57:24 UT, and the entire eclipse finally ends at 17:29:57 UT.