Monday 24 May 2021 | Written by Supplied | Published in Features, In Depth
This time lapse sequence shows a Full Moon “floating” in the reddish Earth’s shadow, captured in 2018 in Thailand. The Moon is strangely orange and red during the total eclipse, but after this phase it starts to secede from the shadow and an hour and half later there is a common Full Moon in the sky again. Photo by Petr Horálek/21052126
Some people will still remember the solar eclipse in July 2010. For the next one we must wait until the morning of April 8 2024, but it will be only a partial eclipse from all islands of the Cook Islands, when the sun rises. But it’s not only solar eclipses that can beautify the local sky. Another opportunity to see something special is coming tonight. By Petr Horálek.
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