The totality phase – which is where the Moon steps into the Earth’s shadow in its entirety will be seen across North and Central America and in Ecuador, Colombia, and western parts of Venezuela, Peru, Asia, Australia and New Zealand. In Puerto Rico, the Moon will set once the totality phase begins to end.
People in Alaska and Hawaii will have the opportunity to see every stage of the eclipse, NASA says.
The last time the UK saw a partial solar eclipse was not too long ago – on October 25 where parts of the country caught a glimpse of it, albeit briefly.
NASA will be live-streaming tomorrow’s eclipse and will also feature lunar scientist Noah Petro and a commentary from the telescope stream contributors from across the globe.
Article source: https://www.express.co.uk/news/science/1693410/Blood-Moon-2022-Last-Lunar-Eclipse-three-years-November-8-space-news