Blood Moon Rising: How and where to watch ominous ELECTION DAY lunar eclipse

Blood Moon Rising: How and where to watch ominous ELECTION DAY lunar eclipse
A Total Lunar Eclipse of the moon is seen on May 26, 2021 in Auckland, New Zealand (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK: On Election Day next Tuesday, November 8, an ominous crimson moon will rise just before the polls open and will be visible in regions of North, Central, and South America. The moon will appear redder on November 8 as only the sunlight that travels through our planet's atmosphere will be able to reach the lunar surface during this cosmic event, which will take place when the sun, Earth, and moon perfectly align. This is the last lunar eclipse until 2025, so skywatchers would not want to miss it when it reaches full totality, or when the moon is completely in the Earth's shadow, at 5:50 am ET.

According to NASA's solar system blog, "The moon doesn't revolve in the exact same plane as the sun and Earth do." The two times a year that they line up is referred to as eclipse season. The likelihood that the moon will pass between our planet and the neighbouring star for a solar eclipse or that the Earth will block out the moon for a lunar eclipse increases during an eclipse season when the moon is essentially buzzing around between us and the sun. Usually two to three eclipses occur in less than a 37-day period during eclipse seasons.

ADVERTISEMENT

ALSO READ

How and where to watch last partial solar eclipse of 2022

Is Earth spinning faster than it has in decades? Planet recorded 28 fastest days in 2020, here's what it means