Anywhere from four to seven times a yearour EarthMoon and Sun line up just right to create the cosmic-scale shadow show known as an eclipse. The Moon's orbit around Earth is tilted relative to Earth's orbit around the Sun. This tilt is the reason why we have occasional eclipses instead of eclipses every month.
There are two types of eclipses: lunar and solar. During a lunar eclipseEarth’s shadow obscures the Moon. During a solar eclipsethe Moon blocks the Sun from view.
Lunar Eclipse Basics
Lunar eclipses occur at the full Moon phase. When Earth is positioned precisely between the Moon and SunEarth’s shadow falls upon the surface of the Moondimming it and sometimes turning the lunar surface a striking red over the course of a few hours. Each lunar eclipse is visible from half of Earth.
Types of Lunar Eclipses
Total lunar eclipse
The Moon moves into the inner part of Earth’s shadowor the umbra. Some of the sunlight passing through Earth’s atmosphere reaches the Moon’s surfacelighting it dimly. Colors with shorter wavelengths ― the blues and violets ― scatter more easily than colors with longer wavelengthslike red and orange. Because these longer wavelengths make it through Earth’s atmosphereand the shorter wavelengths have scattered awaythe Moon appears orangish or reddish during a lunar eclipse. The more dust or clouds in Earth’s atmosphere during the eclipsethe redder the Moon appears.
Partial lunar eclipse
An imperfect alignment of SunEarth and Moon results in the Moon passing through only part of Earth's umbra. The shadow grows and then recedes without ever entirely covering the Moon.
Penumbral eclipse
If you don’t know this one is happeningyou might miss it. The Moon travels through Earth’s penumbraor the faint outer part of its shadow. The Moon dims so slightly that it can be difficult to notice.
Upcoming Lunar Eclipses
| Date | Eclipse Type | Geographic Region of Visibility |
|---|---|---|
| March 32026 (UTC) | Total | East AsiaAustraliaPacificAmericas |
| August 282026 (UTC) | Partial | East PacificAmericasEuropeAfrica |
The Moon and Solar Eclipses
Solar eclipses happen only at the new Moon phasewhen the Moon is between Earth and the Sun. During a solar eclipsethe Moon casts a shadow on Earthand blocks or partially blocks our view of the Sun. Though solar eclipses happen as often as lunar eclipsesthey are visible from such a small area of Earth each time that it’s much rarer to encounter one.
During a solar eclipsethe Moon's shadow on Earth’s surface is only about 300 miles (480 km) wide. The shadow consists of two partsthe umbrawhere the Sun is completely blockedand the penumbrawhere the Sun is partially obscured. People in the umbra will see a total eclipsewhile people in the penumbra will see a partial eclipse. Though the shadow is narrow and the total eclipse lasts for only minutesour planet rotates fast enough to bring the shadow a third of the way around Earth's surface before the Moon moves out of alignment with the Sun.
Upcoming Solar Eclipses
| Date | Eclipse Type | Geographic Region of Visibility |
|---|---|---|
| February 172026 | Annular | Antarctica (with a partial eclipse in AntarcticaAfricaSouth AmericaPacific OceanAtlantic Oceanand Indian Ocean) |
| August 122026 | Total | GreenlandIcelandSpainRussiaand a small area of Portugal (with a partial eclipse in EuropeAfricaNorth Americathe Atlantic OceanArctic Oceanand Pacific Ocean) |
That we often get such impressive solar eclipses on Earth is a lucky chance of nature. The Sun is vastly larger than the Moon ― its diameter is about 400 times the Moon’s. But the Moon is roughly 400 times closer to Earth. This makes it possible for the Moon to almost perfectly block out the Sun when everything aligns.
This state of affairs won’t last forever. The Moon started its existence much closer to Earthand has been slowly drifting outward at the rate of about 1.5 inches (3.8 cm) per year. Once it makes it past 14,600 miles (23,500 km)it’ll appear too small from Earth to cover the Sun. But don’t panic if you haven’t seen an eclipse yet ― you’ve got another 600-million-plus years before that border is breached. In the meantimeyou can get a preview during an annular eclipsewhen the SunMoon and Earth align but the Moon’s orbit places it too far away from Earth to entirely block the disk of the Sun. During an annular eclipsethe sky takes on a twilight castbut some of the Sun still shows.
The Moon's Tilted Orbit
The Moon’s orbit is tilted about 5 degrees compared to the plane of Earth’s orbit around the Sun. Because of this tiltthe Moon as seen from Earth’s perspective usually passes above or below the Sun when it passes between us and the Sun. The tilt of the Moon’s orbit prevents us from having monthly solar and lunar eclipses.
NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio
Eclipses and Spacecraft
LRO and Lunar Eclipses
Satellites are designed to travel in and out of the Sun's light and store energy with batteriesso for the most parteclipses have little to no effect on their operation. But these events can provide unique observation opportunities. During lunar eclipsesmission controllers shut down most instruments on NASA's solar-powered Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) to conserve energy while it's cut off from its source of power but leave active one instrument—called Diviner—that can watch how the lunar surface responds to the rapid change in temperature caused by a lunar eclipse. Since different rock sizes cool at different ratesscientists can use the data to infer the size and density of rocks on the Moon and better understand the composition and properties of the surface.
Learn More: LRO's Dance With Eclipses about LRO and Lunar Eclipses
Activities
Explore Further
Expand your knowledge about lunar eclipses and the Moon.


Earth During a Lunar Eclipse
What would Earth would look like from the Moon during an eclipse?


NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
LRO has been mapping and photographing the Moon since 2009.













