July 1953 lunar eclipse

Total Lunar Eclipse
July 26, 1953
(No photo)

The moon passes west to east (right to left) across the Earth's umbral shadow, shown in hourly intervals.
Series 128 (37 of 71)
Gamma -0.0071
Magnitude 1.8628
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Totality 1:40:42
Partial 3:35:42
Penumbral 5:26:30
Contacts (UTC)
P1 9:37:55
U1 10:33:19
U2 11:30:49
Greatest 12:21:10
U3 13:11:31
U4 14:09:01
P4 15:04:25

A total lunar eclipse took place on Sunday, July 26, 1953.

The Moon passed through the very center of the Earth's shadow. While the visual effect of a total lunar eclipse is variable, the Moon may have been stained a deep orange or red colour at maximum eclipse. This was a great spectacle for everyone who saw it from Australia as well as parts of Asia, Korea, New Zealand and Hawaii. The partial lunar eclipse lasted for 3 hours and 35 minutes 42 seconds in total. With an umbral lunar eclipse magnitude of 1.8628, this was the largest lunar eclipse of the 20th century. Gamma had a value of only -0.0071. Due to the Moon's relatively large size, totality lasted 100 minutes 42 seconds unlike July 16, 2000 which lasted 106 minutes 25 seconds, the longest since August 13, 1859 (which was only 3 seconds longer). This was the darkest total lunar eclipse in the 20th century.