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Don’t Miss Sunday’s Full Corn Moon Rising After Total Lunar Eclipse

The total lunar eclipse will last about 82 minutes, turning the moon a coppery-red color visible to nearly six billion people across Asia, Australia, Africa, and Europe, experts say.

  • On the night of September 7–8, 2025, a total lunar eclipse will be visible to nearly six billion people across Asia, Australia, Africa, Europe, and the Middle East.
  • When Earth moves between the Sun and Moon, it casts a shadow while sunlight refracting through Earth's atmosphere via Rayleigh scattering creates the Moon's red hue.
  • Universal Time listings show totality lasts 82 minutes from 17:30 to 18:52 GMT, with penumbral at 15:28, partial at 16:27, and fullest at 6:12 p.m. UTC.
  • Experts say no special equipment is needed, but viewers should pick a dark viewing location, allow 15–20 minutes for eye adjustment, and use binoculars for better surface detail.
  • This eclipse sits in a three-event sequence, following the March 13–14, 2025 eclipse and preceding the March 2–3, 2026 eclipse visible from Asia, Australia and North America.
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National Geographic broke the news in United States on Thursday, September 4, 2025.
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