Yes, in the morning. I cant believe Im answering a question for Bobby, this is cool.
-
From beginning to end, the eclipse will last from 11:33 UT (6:33 a.m. EST, 3:33 a.m. PST) to 17:30 UT (12:30 p.m. EST, 9:30 a.m. PST). Totality, the time when Earth's shadow completely covers the moon, will last 51 minutes. All of the United States will see some portion of the eclipse. The West Coast will have a more complete view of this particular eclipse.
The West Coast will see totality as the moon sets and the sun rises. For West Coast viewers, the eclipse begins at 3:33 a.m. PST. The peak, when the moon is a deep red, occurs at 6:30 a.m. PST.
For East Coast residents, the only stage of the eclipse that will be visible is the earliest portion when the moon begins to enter Earth's shadow. This dimming is very slight and may be difficult to see.
The West Coast will see totality as the moon sets and the sun rises. For West Coast viewers, the eclipse begins at 3:33 a.m. PST. The peak, when the moon is a deep red, occurs at 6:30 a.m. PST.
For East Coast residents, the only stage of the eclipse that will be visible is the earliest portion when the moon begins to enter Earth's shadow. This dimming is very slight and may be difficult to see.
-
You might see at least some of it. The moon will be low in the West, heading for the horizon, with the sun coming up in the East on Saturday morning. You'll want to get away from any hills or buildings that might interfere with the Western view. But to be sure, you'll need to find your latitude and longitude, or live near a large city. Then you'll need to look up sunrise and moonset for you location. Note: Central Standard Time is 6 hours later than UC, so count backwards from any times on the eclipse chart.
And next time, plan further ahead.
And next time, plan further ahead.
-
Hi Bobby,
Yes, if you've got a good western horizon, you should be able to see most of the ingress into the umbra. It helps if you're in the western part of Texas: El Paso is much better than Houston (the two cities I checked).
Yes, if you've got a good western horizon, you should be able to see most of the ingress into the umbra. It helps if you're in the western part of Texas: El Paso is much better than Houston (the two cities I checked).
-
Yes.
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/sci…
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/sci…
-
I don't know look it up on google.