February 1971 lunar eclipse

February 1971 lunar eclipse
Total eclipse
Date10 February 1971
Gamma0.27413
Magnitude1.30819
Saros cycle123 (50 of 73)
Totality82 minutes, 11.4 seconds
Partiality204 minutes, 42.9 seconds
Penumbral369 minutes, 37.3 seconds
Contacts (UTC)
P104:39:52.5
U105:52:17.4
U207:03:33.4
Greatest07:44:39.6
U308:25:44.8
U409:37:00.3
P410:49:29.8

A total lunar eclipse took place at the Moon's descending node of the orbit on Wednesday, February 10, 1971, the first of two total lunar eclipses in 1971. It had an umbral magnitude of 1.30819. The Moon narrowly missed the center of the Earth's shadow due its gamma being >0.2725 at 0.27413 . The Moon was plunged into darkness for 1 hour, 22 minutes and 11.4 seconds, in a deep total eclipse which saw the Moon 30.819% of its diameter inside the Earth's umbral shadow. The visual effect of this depends on the state of the Earth's atmosphere, but the Moon may have been stained a deep red colour. The partial eclipse lasted for 3 hours, 44 minutes and 42.9 seconds and in total. Occurring only 2.7 days before apogee (Apogee on Saturday, February 13, 1971), the Moon's apparent diameter was 5.9% smaller than average.


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