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Lunar eclipse part 1 of 3

Lightwave Space posted on Nov 13, 2013
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Description


A lunar eclipse as viewed from the moon. The date is 27 July 2018, the location is the crater Langrenus. The stars Sirius, Procyon, Pollux and Castor are visible in the image. Amateur astronomers in this gallery will likely be able to spot them if any look at this image. I did this image in 2004 for an unpublished graphic novel of mine dealing with realistic human spaceflight. At the time, I portrayed a lunar base as envisioned by the Bush Administration except for the base location (Langrenus rather than the lunar south pole) and hardware. The base is my own design. I tried for as much realism as possible but I was not certain the stars would be visible so near the sun but went with it anyway. I also tried to imagine what a lunar eclipse as viewed on the moon would look like. The Earth is scaled properly for distance and size. One can only speculate on how the suns glare might actually appear. I used Starry Night astronomy software to get the date of an actual lunar eclipse for the purpose of the story which had the base crew launch a month or so before the eclipse. The crew becomes the first humans to eyewit an eclipse of Earth from the moon. This eclipse will be visible in Cairo Egypt starting around 9 P.M.

Comments (4)


ronmolina

2:28PM | Wed, 13 November 2013

Well done!

)

GrandmaT

6:45PM | Wed, 13 November 2013

Fabulous!

)

FloydianSlip

7:06AM | Thu, 14 November 2013

Excellent work!!! Looks awesome. But I think you have the title wrong. This would be an Earth eclipse. Because the Earth is the one causing the eclipse not the moon.

ljdean

9:25AM | Thu, 14 November 2013

You may well be right. At the present time, there is no term I'm aware of in the astronomical community for an eclipse viewed from the moon other than maybe solar eclipse. There are the terms lunar eclipse for when Earths shadow is seen crossing the moon as viewed from Earth. The term Solar eclipse when we see the moon pass in front of the sun. Technically, a solar eclipse is what one would probably call an eclipse viewed from the moon as well but your term "Earth eclipse" would work better in my opinion.

)

Cyve

4:48PM | Fri, 15 November 2013

Fantastic image !


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