City
Epaper

Super Harvest Moon and partial lunar eclipse to grace the skies tonight

By IANS | Updated: September 17, 2024 11:10 IST

New Delhi, Sep 17 Sky gazers are in for a double treat tonight with two celestial events occurring ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 17 Sky gazers are in for a double treat tonight with two celestial events occurring in a rare coincidence -- a super harvest Moon and partial lunar eclipse -- on Tuesday night.

The Super Harvest Moon on Tuesday night will experience a partial lunar eclipse making it appear slightly larger in the night sky.

The visual delight will be visible in western Asia, North and South America, Europe, Africa, and parts of Antarctica. It will not be visible from India as during the time of the lunar eclipse, the Moon would be below the horizon in the country. It will appear at 8:04 am in New Delhi.

The term "Supermoon" was coined by astrologer Richard Nolle in 1979 as either a new or full Moon that occurs when the Moon is within 90 per cent of its closest to Earth.

The Old Farmer's Almanac calls the full moon of September as the Harvest moon, referring to when corn harvests traditionally started.

The eclipse occurs when the Moon is slightly closer to Earth, which happens because the Moon's orbit is slightly elliptical, or oval-shaped.

As per NASA, the Moon will appear full for about three days, from Monday evening through Thursday morning.

The Moon will start entering the Earth's partial shadow at 8:41 pm EDT on Tuesday (6:11 am IST, Wednesday).

NASA noted that “the slight dimming of the Moon will be difficult to notice until the top edge of the Moon starts entering the full shadow”.

The peak of the eclipse will be at 10:44 pm (8:14 am IST).

As it is a partial eclipse, “only the top 8 per cent of the Moon will be in full shadow”.

The Moon will finish exiting the full shadow at 11:16 pm and the partial shadow on Wednesday at 12:47 am.

"This will be the second of four consecutive Supermoons, appearing larger than last month's Supermoon and effectively tied with the full Moon in October for the closest full Moon of the year," NASA said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"India is experiencing cost of supporting Putin," says US Senator Graham as he warns countries against buying Russian oil

InternationalPakistan: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa launches anti-polio drive to immunise 5.7 million children amid security risks

InternationalRussia launches long-range strikes on Ukrainian military targets

InternationalTrump to address 80th UN General Assembly on Sept 23: White House

InternationalPresident Trump "not happy" but "not surprised": White House on Russia carrying out strikes in Ukraine

Technology Realted Stories

Technology'Moment of pride for Gujarat': CM Bhupendra Patel on inauguration of end-to-end OSAT facility in Sanand

TechnologyCCI, Ministry of Electronics & IT take stock of challenges in data protection

TechnologyDream Sports-owned FanCode to shut sports merchandise business by October

Technology'Digital transformation may boost Indian mining and metals competitiveness by 15 per cent'

TechnologyUkrainian naval ship sunk in drone attack, says Russian Defence Ministry