February 2009 lunar eclipse

Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
February 9, 2009

Just before maximum eclipse (14:29 UTC) from Chennai, India

The moon passes right to left through the Earth's southern penumbral shadow.
Series (and member) 143 (18)
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Penumbral 3:58:49
Contacts
P1 12:38:50 UTC
Greatest 14:38:16 UTC
P4 16:37:39 UTC

The moon moves right to left (west to east) through the constellation Leo

A penumbral lunar eclipse took place on February 9, 2009, the first of four lunar eclipses in 2009, and being the deepest of three penumbral eclipses.[1] It also happened on the Lantern Festival, the first since February 20, 1989.

Visibility

The eclipse was not visible in the East coast of the United States, South America and southernmost Mexico, Western Africa and western Europe. Best visibility was expected over most of Asia, the Western US, Mexico and throughout the Pacific region.[2]


This simulated view shows the Earth and Sun as viewed from the center of the moon near contact points P1 and P4. The eclipse will be visible from earth from the locations of the world as seen on the Earth above.

Map

Relation to other eclipses

See also

Notes


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