
The total duration of the eclipse, which happens to be the first of the year, will last for a whopping 101 minutes while the moon will be partially eaten up by the earth’s shadow for a longer period. “If the weather does not play foul, the celestial event starting 1:08 am NST will be visible from all parts of the country,” said Jayanta Acharya, the chairman of Astronepal. There is another total lunar eclipse later in the year on December 10.
Though eclipses are but natural phenomenon, this one is rare as the moon will pass through the centre of the earth’s shadow for an unusually longer period, said Rishi Shah, an academician at Nepal Academy of Science and Technology (NAST), adding, “Thereby, making the eclipse one of the darkest.”
The last lunar eclipse to exceed the totality of 100 minutes was in July 2000, according to the US-based National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The longest total lunar eclipse of the century, which will be five to six minutes longer than this one, will befall on July 26, 2018.
Unlike a solar eclipse, a lunar eclipse can be observed with the bare eyes, and amateur skygazers are preparing to organise star parties in Kathmandu.
In collaboration with the Park Village Resort, Astronepal is set to organise an observation programme at the Resort premises in Budhanilakantha.
Doomsday 2012, a documentary on the myths that the world will end in 2012, will be screened on Wednesday night before the eclipse starts after the day changes. Astronepal has already set up telescopes at the Resort for the observation, according to Acharya.
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