. 24/7 Space News .
Moon Shadows

Lunar eclipses can only take place during a full Moon when the Moon passes into the dark portion of the Earth's shadow, called the umbra. Credit: NASA

Moffett Field CA (SPX) Oct 27, 2004
Skywatchers are about to be treated to a total lunar eclipse, just in time for Halloween. For more than an hour Wednesday night, the Earth's shadow will completely cover the moon - making it glow orange like a pumpkin.

The color comes from Earth's sunrises and sunsets. That's the only light hitting the full moon during the eclipse, when the Earth passes directly between the sun and moon.

Prime viewing time will be late-night in North and South America, and pre-dawn Thursday in Europe and western Africa.

This is the last such eclipse until March 2007. Total eclipses of the moon occur when the moon passes through the circular shadow that the Earth casts into space and is fully shaded from direct sunlight.

Although masked by the Earth completely or partially from the Sun for as much as an hour and a half, scattering of sunlight off the limbs of our atmosphere doesn't leave the moon without illumination. Instead the blood-bright color of long-wavelength red light enshrouds the moon's otherwise familiar grey pallor.

The eerie, coppery hue is produced by sunlight filtered, reddened and scattered by the rim of the Earth's atmosphere. Because of changes in terrestrial dust in the atmosphere, each lunar eclipse is unique in appearance.

The Moon is believed to play an important role in Earth's habitability . Because the Moon helps stabilize the tilt of the Earth's rotation, it prevents the Earth from wobbling between climatic extremes. Without the Moon, seasonal shifts would likely outpace even the most adaptable forms of life.

In addition, because our moon is lifeless, it is one of the most appealing places to look for the preserved records of life elsewhere. At least according to recent estimates for the amount of ejected rocks that might survive there, the Moon may hold clues from the early history of Mars, Venus and Earth.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Last Ion Engine Thrust Puts Smart-1 On Track For Lunar Capture
Paris (ESA) Oct 19, 2004
From 10 to 14 October the ion engine of ESA's Smart-1 carried out a continuous thrust manoeuvre in a last major push that will get the spacecraft to the Moon capture point on 13 November.







  • NASA Administrator Names New Chief Scientist
  • ESA Looking For More European Women For Toulouse WISE Bed-Rest Study
  • Gourmet Cooking On The Way To Mars
  • Edwards SPADS Keeps An Eye On SpaceShipOne During X Prize Flights

  • Martian Meteorite Measurements Give Information On Planet Evolution
  • Spirit's Mulls Over Uchben
  • Opportunity Ready To Make "Climb" To Burns Cliff
  • Spirit Investigating Ancient Rocks

  • Russia To Build South Korean Launch Pad
  • Russia To Launch New Soyuz Launch Vehicle This Month
  • Brazil Test Launches Brazilian Exploration Vehicle
  • New Soyuz Rocket Launch Is Delayed

  • Laser Technology Helps Track Changes In Mount St Helens
  • UMAC Evaluates DigitalGlobe Products To Mitigate Crop Disease
  • Climate Drought Problems In The West
  • Brazil And China To Build Third EO Satellite

  • New Horizons For Planetary Exploration
  • Outward To The Final Frontier Of Sol
  • Morning Planets Declare A New Dawn Sky
  • SWAP To Determine Where The Sun And Ice Worlds Meet

  • A Lunar Convergence: Eclipse & Return To The Moon
  • ESA's Hipparcos Finds Rebels With A Cause
  • Magnetic Star Mystery Solved
  • Smart-1 First Birthday In Space And Second Lunar Resonance

  • Moon Shadows
  • Last Ion Engine Thrust Puts Smart-1 On Track For Lunar Capture
  • Apollo's Lunar Leftovers
  • New Moon Shot Not So Costly

  • Nextel And Trimble Join Forces To Offer Mobile Phones For Navigation
  • Garmin Certifies GNS 480 for WAAS Precision Approaches
  • China Joins Galileo Project
  • Delphi First In USA With OEM Telematics For Dynamic Route Guidance

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement