Total lunar eclipse January 31, 2037 | |
---|---|
Ecliptic north up The moon will pass through the Earth's shadow. | |
Saros (and member) | 134 (28 of 73) |
Gamma | 0.3619 |
Magnitude | 1.2074 |
Duration (hr:mn:sc) | |
Totality | 1:03:41 |
Partial | 3:17:28 |
Penumbral | 5:12:06 |
Contacts (UTC) | |
P1 | 11:24:12 |
U1 | 12:21:32 |
U2 | 13:28:26 |
Greatest | 14:00:16 |
U3 | 14:32:07 |
U4 | 15:39:00 |
P4 | 16:36:18 |
A total lunar eclipse will take place on Saturday, January 31, 2037. The Moon will be plunged into darkness for 1 hour and 3 minutes 41 seconds, in a moderately deep total eclipse which will see the Moon 20.74% of its diameter inside the Earth's umbral shadow. The visual effect of this depends on the state of the Earth's atmosphere, but the Moon may be stained a deep red colour for observers in north and west North America, most of Asia, Australia and New Zealand. The partial eclipse will last for 3 hours and 17 minutes 28 seconds in total.[1] It occurs during a supermoon (perigee), and blue moon (second full moon of month), just like the eclipse of January 31, 2018, one metonic cycle (19 years) previous.