Friday, November 19, 2021

The longest partial moon eclipse in 580 years as seen from 2nd Avenue

As Space.com reported:
The full Beaver Moon of November 2021 passed through Earth's shadow in a partial lunar eclipse overnight on Nov. 18-19 in what was the longest eclipse of its kind in 580 years.
And this was obviously a big event for Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers

He reports that the event here was almost rained out (ed note: stupid rain):
After a long, cold and drizzly night, the clouds over 2nd Avenue finally parted, revealing a slow eclipse of the Moon that was already in progress. Three or four times from 3:15 to 4:30 a.m., the Moon disappeared behind the clouds, and came back out, and each time I had to reset the (icy cold!) telescope ... and take a few photos.
And props to Amy for coming out and helping Felton get the telescope back inside.

6 comments:

  1. Very cool - thanks for the pictures sir!

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  2. Thank you for doing this in the cold & rain! Great photos!

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  3. That first picture of the building foreground and the moon far above - that picture is a winner. If you show, that will look really good printed and hanging on a wall. Gave me a thrill

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  4. Okay, if you're bummed out because you missed this partial eclipse, stay tuned for Sunday night, May 15, 2022. The full Moon will rise at about 7 pm in the constellation Libra, some fifteen degrees below the celestial equator (in other words behind the buildings on Second Avenue), and be totally eclipsed around midnight. I suggest the Staten Island ferry. Mark your calendar!

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  5. The reason this one was so special is because of planetary configuration it was very high in the sky and lasted 3.5 hours.

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