September's 'Corn Moon' Rises This Week
The Blood Moon occurs as Earth’s shadow colors the moon red when sun, Earth, and moon align; the eclipse lasts 1 hour 22 minutes on Sunday, experts explain.
- On Sunday, September 7, 2025, stargazers across Asia, Europe and Africa will see a total lunar eclipse called a 'Blood Moon', especially visible in Asia including India and China.
- Because Earth's atmosphere scatters blue light and bends red wavelengths, a total lunar eclipse happens when Earth moves between the Sun and Moon, casting the Moon into Earth's umbra; Ryan Milligan said `That's what gives the moon its red, bloody colour.`
- From 1730GMT to 1852GMT, the eclipse's total phase unfolds, with totality lasting 1 hour and 22 minutes from 8:30pm to 9:52pm EAT, visible to over seven billion people.
- No special glasses are required to view the lunar eclipse, the Pakistan Meteorological Department says it will be visible across Pakistan between September 7 and 8, but cloudy conditions could obstruct viewing for gathered crowds.
- Milligan called Sunday's eclipse a prelude to next year, with NASA noting a March 3, 2026 total lunar eclipse and a Feb. 17, 2026 annular solar eclipse blocking 96% of the Sun's disk.
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51 Articles
There is a total lunar eclipse on the weekend. You will also be able to observe it in Germany - but not from all locations equally well. People in Asia have a better view.
Catch the Final Total Lunar Eclipse of 2025 Sunday Night
Live in the eastern hemisphere? If skies are clear, you have a chance to see a remarkable sight this Sunday night into Monday morning: the ‘Blood Moon’ of a total lunar eclipse. The eclipse favors the Indian Ocean region in its entirety. Europe sees the eclipse already underway at Moonrise, while Australia catches it in progress at Moonset. Only the Americas sit this one out in person... though you can still catch it live online.

How to see rare total lunar eclipse and Blood Moon over the UK this weekend
This weekend, a rare total lunar eclipse is set to take place, with the full Moon turning red. Here is how you can see it over the UK.
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