Total Lunar Eclipse

Local news outlets utilized information provided by Richard Monda, an assistant professor of Astronomy and Physics, to promote the Total Lunar Eclipse that took place early the morning of Nov. 8 and was visible across the entire United States (if skies were clear).

WRCB CBS News 6

WTEN ABC News 10

Beaver Moon Total Lunar Eclipse / 5:15 a.m. Nov-8-2022 / Schenectady, NY / Photo: R.J. Monda

During totality, an eclipse of the moon takes on a “deep-red tint” for what has become known as a “Blood Moon.”  This phenomenon is caused by sunlight shining around the earth, through the atmosphere and onto the moon.  A person on the moon during a total lunar eclipse could look back at the earth and see a circle of red-orange light surrounding it – all the sunrises and sunsets that are taking place on earth!