Monday, December 20, 2010

Winter Solstice 2010

Come howl at the moon tonight. A confluence of events means that the Americans have seats in the first vision of a total lunar eclipse of the full moon of the winter solstice eclipse.

    The moon will pass in the shadow of the Earth early Tuesday morning on the east coast, turning dark brown. Usually the moon is illuminated by the sun, but Earth has been reduced from the light source for hours, making a ghostly appearance moon in the night sky.

    The eclipse will begin at 2:41 ET on the last of the East for over three hours. Thanks to the confluence with the winter solstice appears, the moon on the highest peak in the sky, offers a better vision for future astronomers.

    This is the sum of the moon and the first single of 2010 and next year lunar eclipse is not visible from North America. For winter, tired, NASA is streaming live from the darkness, you can still see the moon from the perspective of the inside. Everyone is brave enough to face the cold, howling away.

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