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Full Hunter's Moon lunar eclipse, last eclipse of 2023, an early Halloween treat for stargazers.


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Posted (edited)

The moon passed through part of Earth’s shadow in a partial lunar eclipse visible to potentially millions of stargazers across the Eastern Hemisphere on Saturday, offering an early skywatching treat days before Halloween.

 

The partial lunar eclipse of Oct. 28, the last of four eclipses of 2023 - two each of the moon and sun - occurred during October's Full Hunter's Moon, offering the spooky sight of part of the moon disappearing as it was engulfed in the darkness of Earth's shadow.

 

The lunar eclipse was only from the night side of Earth as our planet moved between the moon and sun. Skywatchers with clear skies could see the event from countries across Europe, Asia, Africa and parts of Australia. Some observers in select states in the U.S., like New York, Alaska, and North Carolina, were also able to catch the end stages of the eclipse. For everyone else, several livestream webcasts of the lunar eclipse showed online views from TimeandDate.com as well as from Ceccano, Italy by the Virtual Telescope Project.

 

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The full Hunter's Moon is seen during a partial lunar eclipse above Kuwait City in Kuwait on Oct. 28, 2023 in this photo by AFP photographer Yasser Al-Zayyat released by Getty Images. (Image credit: Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP via Getty Images)
 

TimeandDate.com captured stunning video of the entire lunar eclipse, with telescopes spread across three continents in regions like Bergen, Norway, Dubai, United Arab Emirates and Perth, Australia.

 

Near the end of the eclipse, the telescope from Norway captured a truly spectacular sight: the fading lunar eclipse with the brilliant planet Jupiter in to the upper right of the moon.

 

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The last bits of Earth shadow can be seen in the lower right of the moon while the brilliant planet Jupiter shines to the upper right in this stunning vie of the partial lunar eclipse of Oct. 28 from Bergen, Norway. (Image credit: TimeandDate.com)
 

In Dubai, nearly 200 spectators gathered at the Al Thuraya Astronomy center in Mushrif Park to watch the lunar eclipse with the Dubai Astronomy Group.

 

"Lots of children came to see this event. We are very excited and nobody is on their phone, which is incredible, just everyone just looking up at the moon," Khadijah Ahmad, operations manager of the Dubai Astronomy Group, said during the livestream. "We have about eight telescopes set up downstairs and the public are all over these telescopes observing and taking pictures."
 

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(Image credit: Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

 

In Italy, photojournalist  Lorenzo Di Cola of NurPhoto and Getty Images captured this view of the lunar eclipse from L'Aquila, Italy, showing the Earth's shadow on the moon from a different vantage point. 
 

 

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A map of the world showing the path of a partial lunar eclipse over Africa, Europe and Asia on Oct. 28, 2023. (Image credit: In-The-Sky.org/Dominic Ford)
 

Saturday's partial lunar eclipse began at 2:01 p.m. EDT (1901 GMT) and was expected to last about 4.5 hours, ending at 6:26 p.m. EDT (2226 GMT). It was a partial eclipse because at the time of the event, the moon only partially moved into the darkest part of Earth's shadow  — called  the umbra.

 

This was the last lunar eclipse of 2023. The next one will occur on March 24, 2024, but will be less impressive, with the moon passing only through the Earth's outer shadow, which scientists call the penumbra. That eclipse will be visible from North America and is a preview for a truly spectacular total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, which will be visible from Mexico, the United States and Canada.

Edited by LazyHippo
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