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ECLIPSES
Lunar eclipse turns moon blood red
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) June 16, 2011

The longest lunar eclipse in more than a decade turned the moon blood red on Thursday, giving stargazers around the world a rare visual treat.

The first eclipse of the year -- when the Earth casts its shadow over the Moon -- was seen in parts of Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia.

Often the moon turns brown but this time it became a reddish, coppery-colour, tinged by light from the Sun.

The terrestrial shadow started to fall at 1724 GMT and lifted around 2300 GMT, although "totality" -- when the lunar face is completely covered -- lasted 100 minutes -- the longest since July 2000.

While keen astronomers in parts of Australia had to contend with dense cloud cover and rain, others had a clearer view of the spectacle.

Around 130 people watched at the Sydney Observatory, with one woman dressed as a vampire.

"There was (also) a child dressed very elegantly as if she was from another century, and a little boy dressed up as a red superhuman," Sydney Observatory manager Toner Stevenson told reporters.

Professor Fred Watson, astronomer-in-charge at the Australian Astronomical Observatory, said the best view would have been from the moon itself.

"If you could watch the phenomena, you would see the earth moving across the sun and it creating a brilliant red rim around the earth," he said.

In Singapore, over 700 people gathered outside a local science centre to watch, local daily the Straits Times reported.

Some avid enthusiasts staked out spots more than four hours before the phenomenon occured with the centre organising astronomy talks and movie screenings to entertain the audience.

There were similar scenes in the Philippine capital Manila where hundreds of amateur and professional astronomers converged before dawn to catch a glimpse.

With blankets and flasks of coffee, the stargazers were treated to clear skies and pleasant weather.

"I will never get tired of watching these events," said Maximo Sacro, 67, the retired curator of the National Museum Planetarium who dusted off his 300-mm lens to capture the image.

"The moon's entry into the earth's shadow was right smack in the middle, it was just perfect. It was very rare and the duration was long."

The eclipse was widely seen across India with crowds gathered at the country's leading planetarium in the capital New Delhi.

The Nehru planetarium organised an overnight "moon carnival" to familiarise visitors, setting up special viewing telescopes.

But traditionalists were not as enthusiastic about the planetary changes, with authorities at several Indian temples reportedly shutting their doors to protect them from the supposed "evil effects" of the eclipse.

While the phenomenon could not be seen everywhere in the world, including the United States, space lovers still got a chance to see it unfold with Google teaming up with Slooh.com.

Slooh accesses telescopes around the world and Google live streamed the event, including audio narrations from astronomers.

There will be partial solar eclipses on July 1 and November 25, but the next total solar eclipse will not take place until November 13, 2012.

It will run in a track across North Australia, New Zealand, the South Pacific and southerly South America.




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100-minute lunar eclipse is rare
Washington (UPI) Jun 15, 2011 - A 100-minute lunar eclipse Wednesday will be the longest and deepest in more than a decade, visible in Europe, South America, Africa and Asia and Australia.

North Americans can see the moon turn stunning shades of orange and red live on nearly a dozen Web sites.

The event -- when the moon passes behind the Earth, blocking the sun's rays from hitting it -- is to begin at 2:22 p.m. EDT, with 100 minutes of total eclipse lasting from 3:22 p.m. to 5:02 p.m.

"The path that the moon is taking through Earth's shadow is almost directly through [the shadow's] center, making for the longest possible path and so the longest duration," Ben Burress, staff astronomer at the Chabot Space & Science Center in Oakland, Calif., told National Geographic.

"The last eclipse that was as long as this one was in 2000, while the next won't be until 2018, so this makes it a somewhat rare event," he said.

Web sites offering live streaming video of the eclipse include Germany's astronation.net, Israel's bareket-astro.com, India's ustream.tv/channel/live-eclipse-streaming, Spain's serviastro.am.ub.es, and South Africa, Dubai and Cyprus images from the Slooh robotic telescope at eclipse.slooh.com.

The next lunar eclipse visible in North America will be Dec. 10. It will rise over Eastern Europe and set over northwest North America. It will also be visible from all of Asia and Australia.

Its total phase will last 51 minutes.





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ECLIPSES
A Rare Eclipse of the Midnight Sun
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 01, 2011
It sounds like an oxymoron: a solar eclipse at midnight. According to NASA, it's about to happen. "It might sound like a contradiction to have a solar eclipse in the middle of the night, but this is what we will see in northern Norway, Sweden and Finland on June 1st," says Knut Joergen Roed Oedegaard, an astrophysicist at the Norwegian Centre for Science Education in Oslo. At this time of ... read more


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