September 2015 lunar eclipse

Total lunar eclipse of 27 September 2015 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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A total lunar eclipse took place between 27 and 28 September 2015. It was seen on Sunday evening, 27 September, in the Americas; while in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, it was seen in the early hours of Monday morning, 28 September. It was the latter of two total lunar eclipses in 2015, and the final in a tetrad (four total lunar eclipses in series). Other eclipses in the tetrad are those of 15 April 2014, 8 October 2014, and 4 April 2015.

Table info: Total lunar eclipse September 28, 2015, Durat...
Total lunar eclipse
September 28, 2015
Lunar_eclipse_September_27_2015_greatest_Alfredo_Garcia_Jr.jpg
From Murrieta, California, 2:52 UTC
Ecliptic north up
Lunar_eclipse_chart_close-2015Sep28.png
The Moon passes right to left (west to east) through Earth's shadow
Saros (and member)137 (28 of 81)
Gamma−0.3296
Magnitude1.2764
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Totality1:11:55
Partial3:19:52
Penumbral5:10:41
Contacts (UTC)
P10:11:47
U11:07:11
U22:11:10
Greatest2:47:08
U33:23:05
U44:27:03
P45:22:27
Lunar_eclipse_chart_close-2015Sep28_wide.png
The Moon crosses Earth's shadow in Pisces, passing west to east (right to left) as shown here in hourly movements. Uranus, at magnitude 5.7, can be seen in binoculars 16 degrees east of the total eclipsed Moon.
Close

The Moon appeared larger than normal, because the Moon was just 1 hour past its closest approach to Earth in 2015 at mid-eclipse, sometimes called a supermoon. The Moon's apparent diameter was larger than 34' viewed straight overhead, just off the coast of northeast Brazil.[1][2]

The total lunar eclipse was darker than expected, possibly due to ash left behind from eruptions of the Calbuco volcano in April 2015.[3]