Space space captures the historical view of the moon of the eclipse of the ‘Blood Moon’

What does a total lunar eclipse look like from the moon? We finally know after the Ghost Firefly Aerospace space ship sent some unique photos taken during last night’s total lunar eclipse.

While surrounded by the reddish light of a “blood moon” during a 65-minute whole, the 6.6×11.5-meter space grabbed a first spectacular image of a total solar eclipse-a sun-like eclipse from the toxic-like a light red ring.

The current direct image of the Earth eclipping the sun, above, is not initially clear, but look at the reflection on Ghost Blue. “Note that the light ring of light comes out in the reflection of our solar panel as the Earth began to block the sun,” the latest post on Firefly blog says. “We hope to subtract more images soon after our band antenna is heated by the cold temperatures they face in the darkness of the whole.” Images will be added to this post when they become available.

Blue Ghost captured the solar eclipse from the moon around 12:30 pm CDT on Friday, March 14, 2025, proving beyond the doubt that a total lunar eclipse, as seen from the moon, is a very different event from the way it looks from Earth.

Halo of Light around the Earth

From Earth, during a total lunar eclipse, the full moon passes through the dark shadow of the umbral earth in space, turning red for a short period of whole. On March 13-14, that whole lasted for 65 minutes. From the moon, a total lunar eclipse sees the Earth moving in front of the sun to block its light, causing a total solar eclipse.

However, it does not darken, as it does during a total solar eclipse seen from the Earth. The only light that can reach the moon while in the earth’s shadow – which blocks direct sunlight from its achievement – is first filtered and distributed by the Earth’s atmosphere.

Not the first eclipse from the moon

Lunar Sunrise of Ghost Blue

This Raleigh distribution sees the light atoms of light with short blue and purple length in the Earth’s atmosphere and scattered while the long -length red and orange light bends to the lunar surface. Basically it is designing thousands of sun and sunset on the lunar surface. During a total solar eclipse, the new moon shifts between Earth and Sun, throwing its shadow on Earth.

Blue Ghost only made the second trade landing on the moon on March 2, at the foot of Mount Mons Mons Latreille in the Sea of ​​Crisis, only north-east of the Sea of ​​Quiet, where NASA’s Apollo 11 mission landed in 1969. It quickly received an image of a Lunar sun and has been functioning in solar energy since then.

Selfie shade of Ghost Blue Ghost

One day the moon lasts for an entire orbit of Earth – 29 days – with the light of the day and the night lasting for 14.5 days. Therefore, Blue Ghost is working for a whole period of lunar light of the day, which is what most lunar missions do due to the need for solar energy. As the night goes down to Ghost Blue – which will do on Sunday, March 16 – its mission will end. However, before being disabled, he will try to get a more historical sequence-a lunar sunset in high definition video. Wait to come on Monday.

On September 7-8, 2025, the second total lunar eclipse of the year will take place, with the event most easily seen by observers in Asia and Australia.

Wishing you to cleanse the sky and wide eyes.

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