Tag Archives: lunar-eclipse

Chandra Grahan june 2011

Time in India is from night of June 15, 2011 to early morning hours of June 16, 2011. The time is same throughout India as per NASA. The following map shows the detail view of the Chandra Grahan on June 15, 2011 and June 16, 2011 early morning around the world. The Chandra Grahan occurs on June 26, 2010, is of no significance in India. It is invisible in India. It is the partial lunar eclipse or Pakshik Chandra Grahan. The Chandra Grahan of June 26, 2010, will be visible in Australia, North Am

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Chandra Grahan june 2011

lunar eclipse June 2011

The event is the first lunar eclipse of 2011 and one of two total lunar eclipses this year. The eclipse, which will occur during June#39;s full moon, will begin at 1:24 p.m. EDT (1724 GMT) and last until 7 p.m. EDT (2300 GMT), but it will not be visible from North America. The longest total lunar eclipse since July 2000 will occur on Wednesday (June 15), with skywatchers in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Australia in prime position to witness the moon treat. For observers in regions

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lunar eclipse June 2011

Another Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark Injury and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Also in this Tuesday edition of The Broadsheet: James Franco is doing more stuff… A Forgetting Sarah Marshall actor passes away (but he’s not the one you’re thinking of)… The Arab League and Steven Spielberg reportedly don’t see eye-to-eye… and more ahead.

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Another Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark Injury and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Your Guide to the Darkest Day in 372 Years [Astronomy]

Late Monday night—well, actually, early Tuesday morning— the moon will move into the earth’s shadow, causing a lunar eclipse visible to anyone in North America. Even better, it’s happening on the Winter Solstice , for the

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Your Guide to the Darkest Day in 372 Years [Astronomy]

Your Guide to the Darkest Day in 372 Years [Astronomy]

Late Monday night—well, actually, early Tuesday morning— the moon will move into the earth’s shadow, causing a lunar eclipse visible to anyone in North America. Even better, it’s happening on the Winter Solstice , for the

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Your Guide to the Darkest Day in 372 Years [Astronomy]