December 2028 lunar eclipse

Total lunar eclipse
December 31, 2028
Ecliptic north up

The moon passes west to east (right to left) across the Earth's umbral shadow, shown in hourly intervals.
Saros (and member)125 (49 of 72)
Gamma0.3258
Magnitude1.2463
Duration (hr:mn:sc)
Totality1:11:20
Partial3:28:49
Penumbral5:36:13
Contacts (UTC)
P114:03:49
U115:07:35
U216:16:19
Greatest16:51:58
U317:27:40
U418:36:24
P419:40:02

A total lunar eclipse will take place on Sunday, December 31, 2028 (January 1, 2029 for Eastern Asian and Australian timezones). It will occur during a blue moon and is the first such eclipse to happen on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day since December 2009, and the first total lunar eclipse on New Year's Day in history. The next such eclipse will be in December 2047 (though January 2048 for most timezones).

Visibility

It will be completely visible over Asia and western Australia, will be seen rising over other areas of Africa and Europe, and setting over eastern Australia and New Zealand.

Eclipses in 2028

Lunar year series

Lunar eclipse series sets from 2027–2031
Ascending node Descending node
SarosDate
Viewing
Type
Chart
GammaSarosDate
Viewing
Type
Chart
Gamma
1102027 Jul 18
Penumbral
-1.575891152028 Jan 12
Partial
0.98177
1202028 Jul 06
Partial
-0.790401252028 Dec 31
Total
0.32583
1302029 Jun 26
Total
0.012401352029 Dec 20
Total
-0.38110
1402030 Jun 15
Partial
0.753461452030 Dec 09
Penumbral
-1.07315
1502031 Jun 05
Penumbral
1.47322
Last set2027 Aug 17Last set2027 Feb 20
Next set2031 May 07Next set2031 Oct 30

Saros series

Lunar saros series 125, repeating every 18 years and 11 days, has 26 total lunar eclipses. The first was on June 17, 1704 and the last will be on March 19, 2155. The longest totality occurrence of this series (7th) was on August 22, 1812 when totality lasted one hour and 42 minutes.[1]

This is the 19th of 26 total lunar eclipses in series 125. The previous occurrence was on December 21, 2010 and the next will occur on January 12, 2047.

Half-Saros cycle

A lunar eclipse will be preceded and followed by solar eclipses by 9 years and 5.5 days (a half saros).[2] This lunar eclipse is related to two annular solar eclipses of Solar Saros 132.

December 26, 2019January 5, 2038

Tzolkinex

See also

Notes


🔥 Top keywords: Main PageSpecial:SearchPage 3Wikipedia:Featured picturesHouse of the DragonUEFA Euro 2024Bryson DeChambeauJuneteenthInside Out 2Eid al-AdhaCleopatraDeaths in 2024Merrily We Roll Along (musical)Jonathan GroffJude Bellingham.xxx77th Tony AwardsBridgertonGary PlauchéKylian MbappéDaniel RadcliffeUEFA European Championship2024 ICC Men's T20 World CupUnit 731The Boys (TV series)Rory McIlroyN'Golo KantéUEFA Euro 2020YouTubeRomelu LukakuOpinion polling for the 2024 United Kingdom general electionThe Boys season 4Romania national football teamNicola CoughlanStereophonic (play)Gene WilderErin DarkeAntoine GriezmannProject 2025