A Blue-Banded Blood Moon
Image Credit:
Angel Yu
What causes a blue band to cross the Moon during a lunar eclipse?
The blue band is real but usually quite hard to see.
The featured HDR image of last week's lunar eclipse, however -- taken from
Yancheng,
China --
has been digitally processed to equalize the
Moon's brightness and exaggerate
the colors.
The gray color of the bottom right is
the Moon's natural color, directly illuminated by sunlight.
The upper left part of the Moon is not directly lit by the Sun since it is
being eclipsed -- it in the
Earth's shadow.
It is faintly lit, though, by sunlight that has passed deep through
Earth's atmosphere.
This part of the Moon is red -- and called a
blood Moon -- for the same reason that Earth's sunsets are red:
because air scatters away
more blue light than red.
The unusual blue band is different -- its color is created by sunlight that has passed high through Earth's atmosphere, where
red light is better absorbed by ozone than
blue.
A total eclipse of the Sun will occur tomorrow but,
unfortunately, totality be
visible only near the
Earth's South Pole.