Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. An award-winning reporter writing about stargazing and the night sky. A total lunar eclipse — also known as a “Blood Moon” — is a ...
Tonight, onlookers will get the first glimpse of a total lunar eclipse since 2022, provided that impending storms don’t rain on everyone’s parade. Unlike a solar eclipse, where the moon temporarily ...
The U.S. and the Western Hemisphere will be treated to the rare sight of a total lunar eclipse, which will cumulate in the spectacle of a glowing red "blood moon." Beginning late Thursday, March 13 ...
The Sept. 7-8 total lunar eclipse will be visible to over 7 billion people in Asia, Australia, Africa and eastern Europe.
A blood moon on Pi Day only comes along every 300-400 years. Here's how to see it from anywhere.