you would see the moon partly or all the way covered by the shadow of the Earth. It would look like a dark brown ball. Hope this helps.
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.
From the perspective of a lunar observer, it would be a solar eclipse; the Earth would pass between the Sun and the Moon.
No, just as in a solar eclipse, the sun, earth and moon are in different positions depending on where you are on the earth. If we could all see it at the same time that would mean we would all be in the same exact spot on the earth.
No, they see night-time. You can see a lunar eclipse (from anywhere) when the MOON is in the earth's umbra.
it depends with side of the earth the lunar eclipse is on at the time if it was on the northern side of the earth the southern side would be the ones to see it
You see a lunar eclipse ONLY if the Moon enters Earth's shadow.
Then we see full moons. If the Earth passes PRECISELY between the Sun and the Moon, then we see a lunar eclipse.
During a lunar eclipse, an astronaut on the Moon facing Earth would see a total solar eclipse. The Earth would block the Sun's light, casting a shadow on the Moon and obscuring its surface. The Moon would appear dark or reddish due to the Earth's atmosphere refracting sunlight.
A total lunar eclipse can be seen anywhere on Earth where the moon is visible..so you are more likely to see a lunar eclipse than a solar eclipse.
No, they see night-time. You can see a lunar eclipse (from anywhere) when the MOON is in the earth's umbra.
You would most likely see a full lunar eclipse
During a lunar eclipse, a resident of the Moon would experience a solar eclipse; the Sun would be hidden behind the Earth.