Lunar eclipses can be visible from everywhere on the night side of the Earth, if the sky is clear. From some places the entire eclipse will be visible, while in other areas the Moon will rise or set during the eclipse.
Event | UTC Time | Time in Los Angeles* | Visible in Los Angeles |
---|---|---|---|
Penumbral Eclipse begins | Nov 8 at 08:02:15 | Nov 8 at 12:02:15 am | Yes |
Partial Eclipse begins | Nov 8 at 09:09:12 | Nov 8 at 1:09:12 am | Yes |
Full Eclipse begins | Nov 8 at 10:16:39 | Nov 8 at 2:16:39 am | Yes |
Maximum Eclipse | Nov 8 at 10:59:11 | Nov 8 at 2:59:11 am | Yes |
Full Eclipse ends | Nov 8 at 11:41:36 | Nov 8 at 3:41:36 am | Yes |
Partial Eclipse ends | Nov 8 at 12:49:03 | Nov 8 at 4:49:03 am | Yes |
Penumbral Eclipse ends | Nov 8 at 13:56:09 | Nov 8 at 5:56:09 am | Yes |
* The Moon is above the horizon during this eclipse, so with good weather conditions in Los Angeles, the entire eclipse is visible.
Before I sign off, here's great resource you might like
to have: Guy Ottowell's Astronomical Calendar. It was a wonderful
full-year almanac - 2 pages per month, I relied on from the 1980's
until 2016. Well, it is back both in a digital and hard cover
version. Here is the link if you are interested in a
public-friendly list of all the monthly astronomical goings-on,
with additional pages explaining things like eclipses.
https://www.universalworkshop.com/astronomical-calendar-2023/
Jane and the Sidewalk Astronomers
-- Jane Houston Jones, retired JPLer Twitter: @jhjones @otastro Instagram @janehoustonjones http://www.otastro.org/ Astronomy,travel,music,food,cats