Solar vs. Lunar Eclipses

*Information about the 2024 total eclipse provided by eclipse2024.org*

What is the difference between solar eclipses and lunar eclipses?

In a nutshell:

Solar Eclipse
Lunar Eclipse
When does it happen?
Day
Night
What phase of the Moon is it?
New
Full
Who can see it?
People in the Moon's shadow
People on the night side of the Earth
Do you need eclipse glasses?
Yes!
No
What are you looking at?
The Sun, with the Moon passing in front of it
The Moon by itself in the night sky

Here is the classic “not-to-scale” diagram of a lunar eclipse:

Just as with the similar diagram of a solar eclipse, this one is very much NOT to scale – but it does show you what’s happening. The Moon, in its monthly orbit around the Earth, has happened to pass into the Earth’s shadow that’s being cast out into space. If the diagram were to scale, you’d see how small the Earth’s shadow is, relative to the size of the Moon’s orbit, and you’d see why lunar eclipses don’t happen every month.

This is what a lunar eclipse looks like:

It happens at night, and only at Full Moon. The Moon enters Earth’s shadow, and for about 2 to 4 hours or so, makes its way through that shadow to emerge out the other side. A very bright Full Moon turns a very dull, deep red or brown color, and everyone who can see the Moon (that is, every one on the night side of the Earth) will see the eclipse.

You don’t need to use eclipse glasses, because you’re looking at the Moon – and that’s never dangerous to do.

A lunar eclipse is very pretty, but it’s nothing compared to the show that North America is going to get on April 8, 2024!