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The Blood Moon is back! The total lunar eclipse will take place in May 2022.

A time-lapse shows a partial solar eclipse.

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If bad weather ruins your view of the total lunar eclipse on May 15 and 16 you can watch it live online.

You can watch the full Flower Moon experience a total lunar eclipse as the moon moves into the shadow of the Earth. The eclipse will be visible in parts of the Americas, Africa, Europe, and the east Pacific. A penumbral eclipse can be seen in New Zealand, eastern Europe and the Middle East.

There will be a total lunar eclipse in May 2022.

Visibility map of the May 15 to 16, 2022 lunar eclipse.

A visibility map of the May 15 to 16, 2022 Super Blood Moon total lunar eclipse. (Image credit: NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio)

TimeandDate.com says the partial eclipse phase of the moon begins at 10:28 pm on May 15. On May 16th, it starts at 0228GMT. The Blood Moon peak is May 16 at 12:11 a.m. The sun rises at 0411 GMT. The event ends at 1:45 a.m. The sun rises at 0555 GMT. The penumbral eclipse will start an hour earlier and end an hour after the partial eclipse.

Eclipse scientist Fred Espenak has listed May 15th's full moon as a super moon, in which the full moon is at perigee, making it a Blood Moon eclipse.

We have found some information about the webcasts, but do know that they are subject to good weather at their observing sites. As they are announced, we will add more and you can check back as we get closer to the event.

If you want to photograph the moon, or want to prepare your gear for the total lunar eclipse, check out our best cameras. You can read our guides on how to photograph a lunar eclipse and how to photograph the moon with a camera.

NASA Science Live Blood Moon webcast

The Science Live broadcast will start at 9:32 p.m. May 15 is the day before May 16.

The agency stated in a description that NASA experts would learn about this incredible natural phenomenon, look through telescope views across the world, and hear about plans to return humans to the lunar surface with the Artemis program. Ask them in the live chat.

Slooh Flower Moon lunar eclipse webcast

The online telescope astronomy service will host its own live stream on May 15 at 9:30 p.m. The date is May 16

The Online Telescope's experts will explain the spectacular sight from the start of the penumbral phase through the partial, and then the beautiful total phase that lasts for 1 hour and 19 minutes.

A members-only Star Party is also available on Discord following totality. You can learn how to join at the website.

TimeandDate.com will host a broadcast on its website at 10 p.m. May 15 is the day before May 16. There will be a live chat during the eclipse.

Whether it is visible from your location or not, our live coverage is your perfect companion. The company said to follow the eclipse from start to finish.

There is a page on TimeandDate.com for the Blood Moon May 2022.

Griffith Observatory total lunar eclipse webcast

The Blood Moon will be visible from the historic observatory in Los Angeles on May 15 and it will host a live lunar eclipse watching party.

The observatory will start broadcasting at 10:35 p.m. It runs through 3:50 a.m. According to the observatory, the time is 0750GMT. If you are based in the Pacific time zone, that time is . The full time-lapse video of the lunar eclipse will be shared on the observatory's YouTube channel.

Virtual Telescope total supermoon eclipse webcast

The Virtual Telescope Project will host a Total Supermoon Eclipse event. There are views from across the visibility region.

The eclipse will take place in Ceccano, Italy. You can follow it live on the Project's page or on the event broadcast site.

According to Masi, the webcast will include an imager and someastrophotographers.

  • astrophotographer: Gianluca Masi (Rome, Italy);
  • astrophotographer: John W. Johnson (Nebraska, USA)
  • astrophotographer: Joaquin Fabrega Polleri (Panama);
  • astrophotographer: Chris Curwin (Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada);
  • astrophotographer: Fernando Rodriguez (Florida, USA);
  • astrophotographer: Jim Thompson (Ottawa Valley Astronomy & Observers Group, Canada);
  • astrophotographer: Gary Varney (Florida, USA);
  • astrophotographer: Karim Jaffer (Montreal Centre, Royal Astronomical Society of Canada);
  • coordinator and live comment: astrophysicist Gianluca Masi (The Virtual Telescope Project, Italy).

If you snap an amazing lunar eclipse photo and would like to share it with Space.com's readers, send your photo, comments, and your name and location to us.

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