The third lunar eclipse will be marked by July 4 in 2020. The first Lunar eclipse from 2020 was in Janei, followed in June by the second, making it the Third Lunar eclipse. People in some regions will be able to witness a penumbral Lunar eclipse that has also been described as a lunar "buck moon," which has been good news for American residents.
July 2020 Lunar Eclipse: What's a penumbral lunar eclipse?
An insignificant Lunar Eclipse (in Hindi, upchaya chandra grahan) is when some of the light of the Sun is blocked from reaching directly into the Moon and the external part of the shadow on the Earth, called the 'penumbra.' The penumbra is fainter in comparison to the dark center of the Earth's shadow called 'umbra' this type of eclipse is harder to spot. A lunar eclipse is therefore sometimes mistaken as a full Moon. Because of this.
As per NASA, the first full moon of summer (US) is scheduled for the Algonquin tribes to call the Buck Moon this full moon at 12:44 EDT on July 5 (10:14 IST on June 5).
When is the lunar eclipse going to happen?
According to data from TimeandDate, on July 4th (8:37am IST on July 5) the lunar eclipse is scheduled to start at 11:07pm EDT, reaching its highest peak on June 5th (9:59am IST on July 5th). The eclipse of the lunar eclipse will last 2 hours and 45 minutes after 1:52am EDT on 5 July (6:22 am IST on 5 July).
Who can experience the lunar eclipse? Who can?
This lunar eclipse from 4-5 July is unfortunately not visible in India. But it will also be witnessed by people in a large part of North America, South / Western Europe , Africa, the Indian Ocean.
How to see the lunar eclipse of July 2020?
The dark lunar eclipse and other such celestial events are frequently distributed on popular YouTube networks like Slooh and the virtual telescope Web site. You should be able to watch it without any special equipment in one of the regions where this lunar eclipse is visible.