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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Science
Stuart Clark

Starwatch: Earth's shadow takes a bite out of the moon

A multiple exposure photograph shows the moon in various stages of eclipse during the partial lunar eclipse of 7 August 2017.
A multiple exposure photograph shows the moon in various stages of eclipse during the partial lunar eclipse of 7 August 2017. Seen from Bethlehem, West Bank. Photograph: Xinhua/Barcroft Images

A partial lunar eclipse is visible from much of the world this week. Only North America, Greenland and northern Russia will miss out. From Asia and Australia, the eclipse will take place in the early hours of 17 July. From the rest of the world it will happen on the preceding evening. Lunar eclipses take place when Earth crosses between the sun and the moon, and casts its shadow across the lunar surface. The outer portion of Earth’s shadow, known as the penumbra, touches the moon at 19:45 BST on 16 July. At this time, the moon will still be below the horizon from the UK. When it rises at 21:06 BST, the darkest, most noticeable portion of Earth’s shadow will have just begun to pass across it. Mid-eclipse occurs at 22:32 BST, when a dark circular “bite” will have covered the moon’s northern hemisphere entirely. By midnight BST, the umbra will be about to leave the moon, and the penumbral phase finishes about an hour and a quarter later.

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