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Ganapatis birthday is on the fourth day of the bright half of lunar month of Bhadrapada This night one is supposed to avoid seeing the moon But for those who have seen the moon there is a remedy On Ga ...
Today, July 6, 2025, the moon is 11 days old and is in the Waxing Gibbous phase of its lunar cycle. It is 83% illuminated.
Home to the world's highest tides and biggest lobsters, New Brunswick will experience a partial solar eclipse at sunrise on March 29, 2025. For one eclipse-chaser, it's the ultimate moon-shot.
After this year’s total lunar eclipse, we won’t have to wait as long for the next eclipse to be visible over the United States in March 2026, according to NASA.
According to NASA, the next total lunar eclipse visible from the U.S. is on Tuesday, March 3, 2026. A few months later, there will be a partial lunar eclipse on Aug. 27-28.
Well my friends, the hell mouth is open and eclipse season is upon us. On March 14th, we will witness and brace for the fallout of a total lunar Blood Moon eclipse in Virgo.
1:59 a.m. Greatest eclipse: This is when we will see the lunar eclipse at its peak. 2:31 a.m. Totality ends: The moon will start its transition from the umbra into the penumbra.
1:09 a.m. – Partial eclipse begins: The moon begins to enter Earth's umbra and the partial eclipse begins. As the moon moves into the umbra, it looks like a bite is being taken out of the lunar ...
For people in the Eastern time zone, the total lunar eclipse will begin at 2:26 a.m. Friday, March 14 and end at 3:31 a.m. During that time span, the full moon will turn from white and yellow to a ...
The total lunar eclipse will be visible throughout the U.S. on the night of March 13 into 14. The website Time and Date predicts the moon will complete all of the eclipse phases in 6 hours, 3 minutes.
The eclipse begins Thursday evening in New Mexico and will conclude very early on Friday morning. Penumbral eclipse begins at 9:57 pm MT. Partial eclipse begins at 11:09 pm MT.
It was the first total lunar eclipse since November of 2022. It began at 12:55 a.m. on Friday and entered totality at 2:26 a.m. The moon was out of Earth's shadow entirely at 5:05 a.m.