How to watch the Blood Moon from wherever you are
techradar.com
Our Moon is about to put on a show: its first total lunar eclipse of the year, and this time it will be a "blood moon."
A lunar eclipse occurs when the Earth blocks the sun, casting a shadow on the moon. While that should thrust the big gray, 4.53 billion-year-old orb into darkness, the Moon can instead appear red. According to NASA, some light from the sun does filter through Earth's atmosphere and cast orange-hued light on the Moon. Depending on how deep the orange is, some people think it appears almost red.
A blood moon like this is rare because it occurs only once every couple of years, and a full moon is a necessary component of a total eclipse.

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