In and around totality. September's Full Corn Moon rose in North America on Sept. 7, 2025, hours after a total lunar eclipse in Australia, Asia, Africa and Europe.
As a solar eclipse approaches totality and our eyes adjust to dimming light, our color vision changes. It's called the Purkinje effect. Eclipses change the light around us, leading to unusual sights.
Monday's solar eclipse also brings a chance to see crescent shapes in shadows and pinholes, as the moon moves in front of the sun. There are two types of eclipses: lunar and solar. During a lunar eclipse, Earth's shadow obscures the Moon.
In a solar eclipse, the Moon blocks the Sun from view. During a solar eclipse, viewers inside the penumbra see a partial solar eclipse. The Moon's color changes to a reddish or grayish tint when the Earth casts its penumbra shadow across the Moon.
This shifting color act doesn't just happen during the height of the eclipse. The movement of the Moon between the Sun and Earth can take a few minutes, starting to turn the surroundings a level. A painting by Lucien Rudaux showing how a solar eclipse might appear when viewed from the lunar surface.
[1] A simulation of the start and end of the August 28, 2007 lunar eclipse, viewed from the center of the Moon. [2] Solar eclipses on the Moon are caused when the planet Earth passes in front of the Sun and blocks its light. Viewers on Earth experience a lunar eclipse during a solar eclipse.
During the total solar eclipse, skywatchers saw ruby-colored prominences sticking out of the moon's shadow. Here's the science of those red dots This article is part of a special report on the. The Moon can take on different shades of red, orange, or gold during a total lunar eclipse, depending on the conditions of the Earth's atmosphere at the time of the eclipse.