Easily. The lunar eclipse of December 21, 2010 will last (lasted) about
5-1/2 hours, with the 'total' phase lasting 73 minutes.
Yes because lunar eclipses are awsome!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A lunar eclipse can last for almost four hours. Only if you count the penumbral time as well as the time of totality together though.
Yes it is possible , it can even last 5 hours.
There won't be any eclipse on December 16, but there will be a total lunar eclipse on the night of December 20/21. Its various stages will last over 4 hours altogether, with totality lasting over an hour. It will be visible throughout North and South America.
The lunar eclipse of December 21, 2010 began at about 05:32 GMT, about 23 hours ago. It ended 5 hours later. Sorry; it's all over. There will be others in the years ahead. Total lunar eclipses are visible, on average, about every other year.
It was at 2:00 A.M. in most of the parts in the U.S. last night on December 21st, 2010. It was a rare event in which a lunar eclipse fell on a winter solstice. The last time this happened was over 400 years ago!
When you posted this question, the eclipse was already over.
The last good total lunar eclipse completely visible in India was on September 7, 2006. On March 3, 2007, the Moon set over India while an eclipse was in progress.
A lunar eclipse is when the shadow of the earth passes over the moon, and a solar eclipse is when the moon passes between the earth and the sun.
The likely term sought is "lunar eclipse" -- Earth's shadow over the Moon -- although the orbit of the Moon is an ellipse(oval path).
The lunar eclipse was over early this morning, and was not visible to the naked eye anyway, so you didn't miss anything.
When the moon is in earth's shadow, a lunar eclipse occurs. When the earth is in the moon's shadow, a solar eclipse occurs. The moon has no 'control' over either of these events.