Image for Article: How to View the ‘Blood Moon’ Total Lunar Eclipse on March 3

Article Details

Title
Article: How to View the ‘Blood Moon’ Total Lunar Eclipse on March 3
Impact Score
3 / 10
AI Summary (Processed Content)

A total lunar eclipse, or "blood moon," will occur on March 3, 2026. It will be fully visible across North and Central America, partially visible in parts of Asia, but not visible from Europe or Africa.

The period of totality, when the moon turns red, will last about 12 minutes near dawn. Viewing requires no special equipment, only a clear, high vantage point as the moon will be low on the horizon.

The red color is caused by sunlight being filtered through Earth's atmosphere and projecting onto the moon's surface. Total lunar eclipses are observable from anywhere on Earth's night side and occur roughly every 2.5 years.

Main topics: The 2026 total lunar eclipse event details (date, visibility, timing, viewing tips); the scientific explanation for the red color; and the comparative frequency of lunar versus solar eclipses.

Original URL
https://www.wired.com/story/how-to-view-the-blood-moon-total-lunar-eclipse-on-march-3/
Source Feed
Science Latest
Published Date
2026-02-22 10:00
Fetched Date
2026-03-04 14:34
Processed Date
2026-03-04 14:54
Embedding Status
Present
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Not Clustered
Raw Extracted Content