We would not get the same redness that we do from sunlight shining through our atmosphere.
A solar eclipse. Earth would cover the Sun from his point of view.
First the order is |Sun : Moon : Earth| and when the Moon is behind the Earth it is |Sun : Earth : Moon|, which would be a Lunar Eclipse.
If the Earth is positioned between the Sun and the Moon, a lunar eclipse occurs.During a total lunar eclipse, the Earth blocks all of the Sun's light that would usually reflect off the Moon.
A lunar eclipse. A solar eclipse is the other way around when the moon passes between the Earth and Sun. This would be a solar eclipse
Consider three bodies (Sun, Earth, Moon) in a straight line.If the order is Sun - Moon - Earth, there's a chance that some folks on Earth will experience a SOLAR eclipse. If the order is Sun - Earth - Moon, Earthlings will see a LUNAR eclipse.If someone were on the Moon when these things happened, the SOLAR eclipse would be an umbral transit (the shadow of the Moon would move across the Earth) and the LUNAR eclipse would be a solar eclipse (or more properly, a solar occultation).
It would still be a lunar eclipse just on the moon and everything would be red. If you are on earth and a Lunar or a Solar eclipse happens than you are actually light than you would be regularly. To find out how much you weigh you take your weight and divide it by 1.5. So a lunar eclipse is just the same a lunar eclipse.
no a lunar eclipse is when the earth's shadow is on the moon so the order would be: Sun Earth Moon an eclipse when the moon's shadow falls across earth is a solar eclipse
From the perspective of a lunar observer, it would be a solar eclipse; the Earth would pass between the Sun and the Moon.
If your on the moon it wouldn't be a lunar eclipse because the earth would between you and the sun so I giuss it would be more like a solar eclipse
Solar eclipse is when the Moon passes between the Sun and Earth (The three objects would appear in this order: Sun >> Moon >> Earth). A lunar eclipse is when the Moon pass into the shadow of the Earth ( The three objects would appear in this order: Sun >> Earth >> Moon ).
A solar eclipse. Earth would cover the Sun from his point of view.
From the Moon's surface, you would see a total solar eclipse.
a lunar eclipse blocked the sun from the earth. That would make a pretty good sentence for those three words, hope that helped
That person would observe an eclipse of the sun.
A partial or total obscuring of the moon by the earth's shadow. Are you asking "If we are on the moon, what would a lunar eclipse be?" In that case, it would be something like what we call a solar eclipse, but it would be the earth obscuring the sun. I think it might more properly be called an occultation; the earth doesn't perfectly block the sun, it literally blots it out (in the case of a total lunar eclipse) for a while until it emerges from the other edge or limb of the earth.
Both result in the moon's orbit around the earth. In a lunar eclipse the moon is on the far side of the earth from the bright sun, and earth's shadow passes across its surface. Earth is larger than the moon, and casts a bigger shadow on it than the moon would cast on the earth during a solar eclipse. Therefore I would have to argue that the lunar eclipse should take longer, or be slower to complete.
That would be a lunar eclipse.