File photo
People from Moscow, via Sydney, to Washington DC will be given a
rare celestial treat on Thursday as three lunar phenomena coincide.
Weather permitting, of course.
A blue moon (a second full moon in a calendar month), a super moon
(when the moon is unusually close to Earth, making it bigger and
brighter) and a blood moon (a moment during an eclipse when the moon
appears red) will all coincide for the first time since 1866.
When to see it
If you live in the US, you will be able to see the eclipse – and
the celestial trifecta – on Wednesday morning, just before the moon
sets.
For those on the US east coast, the eclipse will start just before
sunrise at 5.51am US ET, when the super blue moon will begin turning
red. It will happen at 4.51am CT and those on the west coast can see it
at 2.51am.
Stargazers living in the US will be able to see the eclipse before sunrise on Wednesday, according to Nasa.
For those further east – the Middle East, Asia, eastern Russia,
Australia and New Zealand – the “super blue blood moon” can be seen
during moonrise in the evening of 31 January, according to Nasa.
In Sydney, Australia, the eclipse will begin at a more reasonable
time of 9.51pm on Wednesday night. That’s 10.51pm in New Zealand, 5.51pm
in Shanghai and 12.51pm in Moscow.
How to see it
So long as there is no cloud cover, just look up at the sky!
Most Australian capital cities, while being some of the best places
to view the event, have a chance of significant cloud cover, the
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology told the Guardian.
The eastern suburbs of Melbourne look set to get a good view but
the western suburbs are likely to get some obscuring cloud cover. Sydney
is likely to miss the eclipse due to cloud, as is Brisbane and
Adelaide.
Canberra, Hobart and Darwin could go either way with cloud cover
and Perth and Queensland’s central coast are looking set for a good
view.
There is a significant risk of clouds obscuring the sky for lots of
moongazers in the US too, according to Accueweather, with the east
coast forecast to have for best conditions.
Readers in Western Europe, most of Africa and Central and Southern America will miss out on the eclipse.
But never fear – for those unable to see the moon directly, several
groups are livestreaming it, including the Virtual Telescope and the
University of Western Sydney.
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