π SpacePicture of a Day: Lunar Eclipse in Two Hemispheres πͺ
September's total lunar eclipse is tracked across night skies from both the northern and southern hemispheres of planet Earth in these two dramatic timelapse series. In the northern hemisphere sequence (top panel) the Moonβs trail arcs from the upper left to the lower right. It passes below bright planet Saturn, seen under mostly clear skies from the international campus of Zhejiang University in China at about 30 degrees north latitude. In contrast, the southern hemisphere view from Lake Griffin, Canberra, Australia at 35 degrees south latitude, records the Moonβs trail from the upper right to the lower left. Multiple lightning flashes from thunderstorms near the horizon appear reflected in the lake. Both sequences were photographed with 16mm wide-angle lenses and both cover the entire eclipse, with the darkened red Moon totally immersed in Earth's umbral shadow near center. But the different orientations of the Moonβs path across the sky reveal the perspective shifts caused by the views from northern vs. southern latitudes.
HD image: LINK πΈ
Copyright: Zhouyue Zhu π
Project Website: LINK π
Name | Craft |
---|---|
Oleg Kononenko | ISS |
Nikolai Chub | ISS |
Tracy Caldwell Dyson | ISS |
Matthew Dominick | ISS |
Michael Barratt | ISS |
Jeanette Epps | ISS |
Alexander Grebenkin | ISS |
Butch Wilmore | ISS |
Sunita Williams | ISS |
Li Guangsu | Tiangong |
Li Cong | Tiangong |
Ye Guangfu | Tiangong |