Editor's note: The September 2025 partial solar eclipse put on a magnificent show as the moon swept over the face of our sun, darkening the sky over a swathe of the Pacific Ocean. Check out our wrap ...
On September 21, we’ll experience the Virgo solar eclipse—the second of two powerful eclipses along the Virgo-Pisces axis. While the lunar eclipse two weeks ago cleared out unnecessary energy, this ...
While Americans may have missed out on the total lunar eclipse this weekend, the astronauts living on the International Space Station did not, and they are sharing their amazing views of the show.
In early September 2025, skywatchers in parts of the Eastern Hemisphere were treated to a total lunar eclipse as Earth blocked the sun's light from the moon. The eclipse occurred in the evening of ...
Several total lunar and solar eclipses will be visible in across the globe in the next few years. But you may have to travel. Skywatchers in Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia got to enjoy a total ...
The Moon appears from behind the Tokyo Skytree during a total lunar eclipse in the middle of the night above the Japanese capital early on Sept. 8, 2025. Stargazers enjoyed a ‘Blood Moon’ overnight on ...
Depending on where you were in the world on Sept. 7, a reddish-orange "blood moon" may have filled the sky. But there's nothing to fear, as the phenomenon is part of the cycle of a total lunar eclipse ...
The moon is captured changing colors behind midnight skies during a lunar eclipse observation in Barangay Bagong Silangan, Quezon City at 12:36 a.m. on September 8, 2025. (Photos by Edd Castro / ...
Africa, Europe, Asia and Australia had an optimal view of the phenomenon. Depending on where you were in the world on Sept. 7, a reddish-orange "blood moon" may have filled the sky. But there's ...
A blood moon occurred Sept. 7. The total lunar eclipse wasn't visible in Florida. The next blood moon will be on March 2, 2026, but will be visible only along the U.S. west coast. On Sept. 19, see a ...
A lunar eclipse occurs when the Sun, Earth, and Moon align in a straight line, with the Earth positioned directly between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment can only happen during a full moon, when ...
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