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2014年10月7–8日水曜日 Total Lunar Eclipse (Blood Moon)

This total lunar eclipse will occur on October 8, 2014. It will be visible from North America, parts of Australia, China and Japan. Parts of South Asia, and Eastern Europe will see a partial eclipse. The penumbral phase of the eclipse will begin at 8:17 AM (08:17) UTC on October 8, 2014 and the eclipse will end at 1:32 PM (13:32) UTC the same day. The Moon will be totally eclipsed (totality) for about 58 minutes.

This will also be a good time to see the Draconid meteor shower, which is expected to peak on October 8-9, 2014.

Taking pictures of the Moon

2014 – 2015 lunar tetrad

This Oct 8 eclipse is the second in a tetrad, a series of four consecutive total lunar eclipses in 2014 – 2015.

The term Blood Moon, has recently become popular when referring to the total lunar eclipses in the 2014 – 2015 lunar tetrad. This term has no technical or astronomical basis and it is unclear where the description originated.

This eclipse was visible in Tokyo - go to local timings and animation

What This Lunar Eclipse Looked Like

The curvature of the shadow's path and the apparent rotation of the Moon's disk is due to the Earth's rotation.

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Where the Eclipse Was Seen

Try our new interactive eclipse maps. Zoom in and search for accurate eclipse times and visualizations for any location.

Regions seeing, at least, some parts of the eclipse: East in Europe, Asia, Australia, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Arctic, Antarctica.

Expand for a list of selected cities where at least part of the total eclipse was visible
Expand for a list of selected cities where the partial eclipse was visible

This eclipse was visible in Tokyo - go to local timings and animation

Eclipse Map and Animation

The animation shows where this total lunar eclipse is visible during the night (dark “wave” slowly moving across the Earth's surface).

Shades of darkness

Night, moon high up in sky.

Moon between 12 and 18 degrees above horizon.

Moon between 6 and 12 degrees above horizon. Make sure you have free line of sight.

Moon between 0 and 6 degrees above horizon. May be hard to see due to brightness and line of sight.

Day, moon and eclipse both not visible.

Note: Twilight will affect the visibility of the eclipse, as well as weather.

Entire eclipse was visible from start to end

Entire partial and total phases were visible. Missed part of penumbral phase.

Entire total phase was visible. Missed part of partial & penumbral phases.

Some of the total phase was visible. Missed part of total, partial & penumbral phases.

Some of the partial phase was visible. Missed total phase and part of partial & penumbral phases.

Some of the penumbral phase was visible. Missed total & partial phases.

Eclipse was not visible at all.

Note: Areas with lighter shadings left (West) of the center will experience the eclipse after moonrise/sunset. Areas with lighter shadings right (East) of the center will experience the eclipse until moonset/sunrise. Actual eclipse visibility depends on weather conditions and line of sight to the Moon.

When the Eclipse Happened Worldwide — Timeline

Lunar eclipses can be visible from everywhere on the night side of the Earth, if the sky is clear. From some places the entire eclipse will be visible, while in other areas the Moon will rise or set during the eclipse.

Eclipse Stages WorldwideUTC TimeLocal Time in Tokyo*Visible in Tokyo
Penumbral Eclipse began10月8日 (水)8時15分35秒10月8日 (水)17時15分35秒Yes
Partial Eclipse began10月8日 (水)9時14分51秒10月8日 (水)18時14分51秒Yes
Full Eclipse began10月8日 (水)10時25分13秒10月8日 (水)19時25分13秒Yes
Maximum Eclipse10月8日 (水)10時54分39秒10月8日 (水)19時54分39秒Yes
Full Eclipse ended10月8日 (水)11時23分59秒10月8日 (水)20時23分59秒Yes
Partial Eclipse ended10月8日 (水)12時34分20秒10月8日 (水)21時34分20秒Yes
Penumbral Eclipse ended10月8日 (水)13時33分43秒10月8日 (水)22時33分43秒Yes

* The Moon was above the horizon during this eclipse, so with good weather conditions in Tokyo, the entire eclipse was visible.

Quick Facts About This Eclipse

DataValueComments
Magnitude1.166Fraction of the Moon’s diameter covered by Earth’s umbra
Obscuration100.0%Percentage of the Moon's area covered by Earth's umbra
Penumbral magnitude2.146Fraction of the Moon's diameter covered by Earth's penumbra
Overall duration5 hours, 18 minutesPeriod between the beginning and end of all eclipse phases
Duration of totality59 minutesPeriod between the beginning and end of the total phase
Duration of partial phases2 hours, 21 minutesCombined period of both partial phases
Duration of penumbral phases1 hour, 59 minutesCombined period of both penumbral phases

Eclipse calculations usually accurate to a few seconds

How Many People Can See This Eclipse?

Number of People Seeing...Number of People*Fraction of World Population
At least some of the penumbral phase4,810,000,00065.58%
At least some of the partial phase4,020,000,00054.82%
At least some of the total phase2,790,000,00038.14%
All of the total phase1,970,000,00026.93%
All of the total and partial phases522,000,0007.12%
The entire eclipse from beginning to end167,000,0002.28%

* The number of people refers to the resident population (as a round number) in areas where the eclipse is visible. timeanddate has calculated these numbers using raw population data provided by the Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN) at Columbia University. The raw data is based on population estimates from the year 2000 to 2020.

An Eclipse Never Comes Alone!

A solar eclipse always occurs about two weeks before or after a lunar eclipse.

Usually, there are two eclipses in a row, but other times, there are three during the same eclipse season.

All eclipses 1900 — 2199

This is the first eclipse this season.

Second eclipse this season: 2014年10月23日木曜日 — Partial Solar Eclipse