The sun, the Earth and the moon lined up in a row to put on a light show in Sunday’s night sky, and people around the world looked up to watch the lunar eclipse.
It was a special one for at least two reasons.
First, this moon was a supermoon. It happened to be at perigee, the spot in its slightly oblong orbit that brings it closest to the Earth. And that made it look particularly large in the sky.
The last supermoon total lunar eclipse occurred 33 years ago.
Second, this lunar eclipse was the last in a series of four spanning two years, a phenomenon called a tetrad. Those can happen a couple of times in a century, or they can make themselves very rare, skipping over a few centuries.
Blood moon
Some people call the totally eclipsed moon a “blood moon” for the rusty red-orange color it turns once it is completely in the Earth’s shadow. But that shadow isn’t perfect, and faint sunbeams sneak around Earth’s edges on all sides in the color of a sunset.
It bathes the moon in a brilliant, warm hue.
Brendan McInnis in California loved it. He made a video and tweeted out a GIF. “#SuperBloodMoon looked amazing from San Francisco even with clouds,” he wrote to the image.
#SuperBloodMoon looked amazing from San Francisco even with clouds pic.twitter.com/MnNeY97pPX
— Brendan McInnis (@BrendanMcInnis) September 28, 2015
Overcast skies canceled the show over much of the United States, but NASA streamed it live for those who might otherwise miss it. And they asked observers to post their own photos, which can be seen in answer to @NASA’s tweets.
Great @NASAHQPhoto of tonight’s #SuperBloodMoon. Snap your own pic & upload it in our contest! http://t.co/OtepufVNxQ pic.twitter.com/dkea4hOxog
— NASA (@NASA) September 28, 2015
Some others who saw the eclipse found it less exciting than the hype that preceded it.
“What people expect their pictures to look like tonight vs what they will look like #SuperBloodMoon,” one user tweeted with two pictures for comparison — the first a huge, red ball, the second a tiny dot.
https://twitter.com/SayingForFemale/status/648365438414426112
In Jerusalem, a CNN team saw Christians gathered near the Temple Mount late Sunday watching the eclipse and singing songs, holding hands.
“It’s a beautiful sight in the nighttime sky,” astronomer Mark Hammergren. “It’s a way of connecting us to the universe at large. It gives us this view that there’s a bigger picture than just what we’re concerned with in our daily lives.”
The next supermoon eclipse isn’t due until 2033.
We asked you all to share some of your pictures of the supermoon eclipse with us, and we LOVED the pictures you sent in. Thank you for sharing your photos with us!
Check out this amazing pic of the #SuperBloodMoon by Dave Huntz of the @okcastroclub! @kfor pic.twitter.com/G2o9WSzRIA
— Emily Sutton (@emilyrsutton) September 28, 2015
WOW, Viewer Jack Randal took an amazing shot last night! #OKWX @kfor pic.twitter.com/ApK0CBbjOi
— Aaron Brackett (@Aaron_Brackett) September 28, 2015
#LunarEclipse underway! @kfor pic.twitter.com/S3jxzK4kHS
— Adam Snider (@AdamSniderNews) September 28, 2015
https://twitter.com/AbbyDaws/status/648335886912847873
Here's just one of the many eclipse photos we received at @kfor through the night. #OKWX pic.twitter.com/JjRp55Budj
— Aaron Brackett (@Aaron_Brackett) September 28, 2015
Check out this AMAZING picture from @DisasterShep Photography in Colorado. #frameworthy #SuperBloodMoon pic.twitter.com/NERdMBHHYf
— Emily Sutton (@emilyrsutton) September 28, 2015
Jake Cain sent this great photo last night! #OKWX @kfor pic.twitter.com/ZgHG0l65EY
— Aaron Brackett (@Aaron_Brackett) September 28, 2015
Jeremy Burch sent this great photo last night! #OKWX @kfor pic.twitter.com/j7tsqPXDpa
— Aaron Brackett (@Aaron_Brackett) September 28, 2015
https://twitter.com/KoreySmith4/status/648330621090066432
@kfor pic.twitter.com/rtYGU0flML
— Sharon Miller (@Smiller53Sharon) September 28, 2015
https://twitter.com/stephaniebice/status/648328142881337344
@emilyrsutton An almost total shot: pic.twitter.com/gLH7Kb1p02
— Tad Thurston (@TadThurston) September 28, 2015