Dawn and the Blood Moon: A rare selenelion sight during March 3 lunar eclipse

Space.com explains a rare phenomenon called selenelion, where the Sun rises as the Earth’s shadow falls on the Moon, making both visible at the same time due to atmospheric refraction during the March 3 total lunar eclipse (the last until 2028). The total phase lasts about 59 minutes starting at 3:03 a.m. PST. Visibility varies by location: western regions may witness the Moon near or in totality as it sets, while eastern areas can see dawn with the Moon still visible, and a brief 1–3 minute window may occur when both horizons show the Sun and the eclipsed Moon simultaneously. Observers should have clear eastern and western horizons and be mindful that daylight can wash out the Moon depending on conditions.
- See the 'impossible' as sunrise and a total lunar eclipse appear at the same time on March 3 Space
- A total lunar eclipse will turn the moon blood red on Tuesday across several continents NBC News
- Kenwood’s Robert Ferguson Observatory to host ‘Lunar Eclipse Focus Night’ Sonoma Index-Tribune
- The Eerie ‘Blood’ Moon Will Grace the Night Sky Next Week, Thanks to a Total Lunar Eclipse Smithsonian Magazine
- How and when to see the total lunar eclipse on March 3 CBC
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