A deep partial lunar eclipse on August 27-28, 2026, will be visible in North America and will be the best lunar eclipse anywhere on Earth until New Year's Eve 2028.
Eclipses don't happen at random — they arrive in pairs, on schedule, and 2026 brings two spectacular seasons to prove it.
On March 3, 2026, the full “Worm Moon” will slip into Earth’s shadow and turn a copper-red for 58 minutes. This total lunar eclipse — often dubbed a “blood moon” — will be the last total lunar eclipse ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. An animated map showing where the March 3, 2026 lunar eclipse is visible. Contours mark the ...
A total lunar eclipse is turning the moon a deep reddish-orange on Tuesday for sky-gazers in Asia, Australia, the Pacific Islands and the Americas. This event, often referred to as a blood moon, ...
Fingers crossed for clear skies in August, as the season's major astronomical events all seem to be clustered in that single month!
A total lunar eclipse will happen in the early hours on March 2–3, with the best views occurring in western North America. About 176 million people, or 2% of the world's population, will be able to ...
SEATTLE — A total lunar eclipse took place early Tuesday morning, and was visible across much of North America, weather permitting. The Seattle area didn't have clear skies for the event. After a ...
We tend to hear about solar and lunar eclipses only in the days before they happen, often with the impression that they are unfolding in far-off or exotic parts of the world. For months, the sky ...