A lunar eclipse occurs when the moon moves in front of the Earth’s shadow, this can only happen at a full moon and when the Earth, Sun and Moon are fully aligned.
Total Lunar Eclipse 21st January 2019
The Dick Chambers Observatory was open for observing the ‘blood moon’ on the evening/morning of the 20th-21st January and for a change the weather was good. Other members observered from their homes and below are a few images by members.
Images by Jim Burchell
Images by Martin Crow
Images by Leigh Slomer
Images by Honor Wheeler
Images by Kevin Langford
Images by Mike Rushton
Images by Janice McClean
2015 Lunar Eclipse
2007-03-03 Lunar Eclipse
Images by Honor Wheeler using her Meade ETX 105 telescope afocally with a Fuji E550 digital camera.
This image is of the penumbra of the Earth’s shadow (the dark bar through the middle) during the eclipse before totality. It was achieved by subtracting an image of the moon before the eclipse and an image of it during the penumbral phase by Martin Crow.
Image by Andrew Godden
Image by Jim Burchell
Digital Camera afocally mounted to a Dobsonian telescope.
Images by Simon Dawes
DSLR Canon 400D, Sigma 75-300mm lens at 300mm F5.6 un-tracked (note dew increasing unnoticed over the night degrading the images.
2001-01-09 Lunar Eclipse
Terry Miles observations
All images are copyright. Permission must be sought to from the image owner to the use of any of these images.