News Brief
(Photo: Giuseppe Donatiello/Wikimedia Commons)
Astronomy enthusiasts across Asia, Europe and Africa were treated to a spectacular sight on Sunday (7 September) night as the Moon turned a striking shade of red during a rare total lunar eclipse, the longest since 2022.
The celestial event, often dubbed a ‘Blood Moon’, occurs when the Sun, Earth and Moon align, casting the planet’s shadow across its satellite. Unlike a solar eclipse, no protective equipment is needed.
According to NASA, such eclipses only happen during a full moon. As Earth’s atmosphere filters the Sun’s rays, shorter blue wavelengths scatter, allowing longer red wavelengths to bathe the Moon in a coppery glow, reported NDTV.
Ryan Milligan, astrophysicist at Queen’s University Belfast, explained, “That’s what gives the moon its red, bloody colour.”
Cloudy skies unfortunately obscured the spectacle in several regions, but astronomy groups ensured enthusiasts could still enjoy the phenomenon through global livestreams.
The next such total lunar eclipse will occur on 3 March 2026.