Sadly, no. As I write this, it's January of 2014. Everything
destined to take place in 2013 has already tooken place.
No. A lunar eclipse does not present any danger.
A lunar eclipse can happen at the time of any Full Moon, but no more than about 5 times in a year, max.
no. the moon is going through one of its phases, but a lunar eclipse will not always happen during this as a lunar eclipse can happen in any phase.
A lunar eclipse has no measurable effect on the temperature at any place on earth.
Mercurey and Venus do not have a lunar and solar eclipse because they do not have any moons.
In any eclipse, the Sun, Moon and Earth line up more-or-less exactly. The eclipse is the shadow; a solar eclipse is the shadow of the Moon darkening a part of the Earth, while a lunar eclipse is the shadow of the Earth darkening the Moon.
Any place on earth where it's night-time during the lunar eclipse and the sky is clear.
It doesn't any more than it would at any other time.
When the conditions are right, a lunar eclipse can happen in ANY month, but only at the time of Full Moon.
If you're referring to complete lunar eclipses (a lunar eclipse when the moon is full) then unlikely....but any other lunar eclipse (any other moon phase) usually happens atleast twice a year.
The "next" one of anything is a continually moving target. Any set answer will be out of date when the "next" event occurs. For the date and parameters of the "next" eclipse, check the NASA Eclipse page (at the link below) to see the particular details for any eclipse between the years 2000 BCE to 3000 AD._________________________________________________________ AnswerThe next total lunar eclipse is December 21, 2010, and will be visible from anywhere in North America.According to Astronomy Essentials and Earth Sky, the next lunar eclipse should arrive on April 25th, 2013. It's only a partial eclipse, and it will only last 27 minutes.
Every nation on the world sees a lunar eclipse on an average of every two or three years. The next total lunar eclipse will be on December 21, 2010 and will be visible from any place in North America. (Weather permitting, of course!)