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Total lunar eclipse in May next year and partial lunar eclipse in November-Sciencetimes

In Korea next year, a total lunar eclipse can be observed in May and a partial lunar eclipse in November.

According to the major astronomical phenomena next year announced by the Korea Astronomical Research Institute on the 21st, in May, you can see a total lunar eclipse in which the moon is completely obscured by the Earth’s true shadow.

A lunar eclipse is a phenomenon in which the sun, earth, and moon line up in a straight line and the moon enters the shadow of the earth.

The total lunar eclipse starts at 8:09:30 pm on May 26, Seoul, and is maximally masked at 8:18:42 pm and ends at 8:27:54 pm.

It can be observed in the Americas, Asia, Australia, Antarctica, the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean.

The partial lunar eclipse on November 19 begins at 4:18:24 PM, but can be observed after 5:16 PM, when the moon rises.

The partial lunar eclipse peaks at 6:2:54 pm and ends at 7:47:24 pm.

There are solar eclipses in which the moon covers the sun in June and December, and neither of them can be seen in Korea.

The total solar eclipse that can be seen on the Korean Peninsula is scheduled for September 2, 2035. It can be seen in some areas of North Korea’s Pyongyang and Gangwon provinces around 9:40 am.

It is expected that the meteor shower in the quadrant in January, the meteor shower in the constellation Perseus in August, and the meteor shower in the Gemini in December, which are called the’three meteor showers’ will be seen as usual.

The meteor shower in the quadrant can be seen more than midnight on January 3 and until dawn on the 4th.

The meteor shower in the constellation Perseus is good for observation after 10:17 p.m. on August 13, the maximum time.

The meteor shower in Gemini is expected to be seen at the dawn of the 15th beyond midnight, as the peak time is on December 14th.

The largest full moon next year is the month immediately after the moonrise on April 27 (7:31 PM), and the smallest full moon is the moon seen at 5:57 PM on November 19.

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