🌕Total Lunar

Total Lunar Eclipse

Tuesday, 03 March 2026·05:25:19 UTC UTC
occurred
54 days ago
📅
Date03 March 2026Tuesday, 03 March 2026
Time (UTC)05:25Greatest eclipse
📊
Magnitude1.0062100% coverage
⏱️
Duration10minTotality
📐
Gamma0.1801Shadow axis distance
🌍
HemisphereNorthern HemisphereLunar eclipse

📊 Eclipse Magnitude

Total eclipse — magnitude > 1.0 means full coverage 1.0062
0.00.51.0+
The Moon is fully immersed in Earth's umbral shadow — a Blood Moon occurs. Magnitude 1.0062 means deep totality with vivid red coloring.

🌍 Where to See This Eclipse

🌕 Lunar Eclipse Visibility

🌍 Europe 🌍 Asia 🌍 Africa 🌍 North America 🌍 South America

Visible from the night side of Earth — approximately half the world can observe this lunar eclipse. The eclipse is visible wherever the Moon is above the horizon during the event.

👁️ What to Expect

Observing the Total Lunar

🔴During totality, the Moon turns deep red — the "Blood Moon" effect. This is caused by Earth's atmosphere refracting red sunlight onto the Moon.
👁️No special equipment needed! A lunar eclipse is safe to view with the naked eye. Binoculars enhance the experience.
📸Photography tip: expose for the Moon's detail — try ISO 800, f/8, 1/60s during partial phases; ISO 1600, f/5.6, 2s during totality.

🔄 Saros Cycle

Eclipse Recurrence — The Saros Cycle

Previous similar eclipse20 February 2008
This eclipse03 March 2026
Next similar eclipse14 March 2044
Saros period18 years, 11 days, 8 hours

The Saros cycle (6,585.3 days) is a period after which solar and lunar eclipses repeat with similar geometry. Each successive eclipse in the same Saros series shifts approximately 120° westward in longitude.

🔭 Other Upcoming Eclipses

📖 About This Eclipse

Total Lunar Eclipse — 03 March 2026

The Total Lunar Eclipse occurs onTuesday, 03 March 2026at05:25:19 UTC UTC. It has a magnitude of1.0062 with a maximum duration of10min and a gamma value of 0.1801 (distance of the shadow axis from Earth's center, in Earth radii).

This eclipse is primarily visible from theNorthern Hemisphere. Visible from the night side of Earth — approximately half the world can observe this lunar eclipse.

All eclipse data is calculated using Jean Meeus's "Astronomical Algorithms" (Chapters 54 & 56) — the same mathematical foundation used by NASA's eclipse predictions. Times are in UTC. The next eclipse in the same Saros series will occur on14 March 2044.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions