March 2016 lunar eclipse

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Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
March 23, 2016
Lunar eclipse chart close-2016Mar23.png
The moon will perceptibly dim as the moon passed through the Earth's northern penumbral shadow
Series (and member) 142 (18 of 74)
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Penumbral 4:15:22
Contacts
P1 9:39:29 UTC
Greatest 11:47:12
P4 13:54:50

A penumbral lunar eclipse took place on March 23, 2016, the first of three lunar eclipses in 2016.

Visibility

It was visible from east Asia, Australia, and most of North America.

Lunar eclipse from moon-2016Mar23.png
View of earth from moon at greatest eclipse
480px

Related eclipses

This eclipse is the one of four lunar eclipses in a short-lived series at the ascending node of the moon's orbit.

The lunar year series repeats after 12 lunations or 354 days (Shifting back about 10 days in sequential years). Because of the date shift, the Earth's shadow will be about 11 degrees west in sequential events.

See also

External links


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