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Total solar eclipse with Moon backlit by the Sun, Orion spacecraft at left, Earthshine on lunar surface, Artemis II mission, April 6, 2026, NASA-stock-foto
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Total solar eclipse with Moon fully obscuring the Sun and corona visible, stars and faint Earthshine illuminating lunar surface, Artemis II lunar flyb-stock-foto
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End of total solar eclipse as sunlight reemerges from behind the Moon, bright sliver along lunar limb, Artemis II lunar flyby, April 6, 2026, NASA-stock-foto
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Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07th Apr, 2026. Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07 April, 2026. Clockwise from left: Artemis II Mission Specialist Cristina Koch, Pilot Victor Glover, Commander Reid Wiseman, and Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, uses eclipse viewers, to protect their eyes at key moments during the solar eclipse they experienced during their lunar flyby, April 6, 2026, from Space. This was the first use of eclipse glasses at the Moon to safely view a solar eclipse. Credit: NASA/NASA/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07th Apr, 2026. Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07 April, 2026. The Moon, backlit by the Sun during a solar eclipse, photographed by the Orion spacecraft external camera mounted on the solar array as the Artemis II mission approaches the Moon on day 6 of the mission around the far side of the moon, April 6, 2026, from Space. The Sun is rising at the left edge of the Moon, ending a nearly one-hour total solar eclipse.Credit: NASA/NASA/Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07 April, 2026. The Moon, backlit by the Sun during a solar eclipse, photographed by the Orion spacecraft external camera mounted on the solar array as the Artemis II mission approaches the Moon showing on day 6 of the mission around the far side of the moon, April 6, 2026, from Space. Orion is visible in the foreground on the left. Earth is reflecting sunlight at the left edge of the Moon, which is slightly brighter than the rest of the disk. The bright spot visible just below the Moon's bottom right edge is Saturn. Beyond that, the bright spot at the right edge of-stock-foto
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Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 07 April, 2026. The Moon, backlit by the Sun during a solar eclipse, photographed by the Orion spacecraft external camera mounted on the solar array as the Artemis II mission approaches the Moon showing on day 6 of the mission around the far side of the moon, April 6, 2026, from Space. Orion is visible in the foreground on the left. Earth is reflecting sunlight at the left edge of the Moon, which is slightly brighter than the rest of the disk. The bright spot visible just below the Moon's bottom right edge is Saturn. Beyond that, the bright spot at the right edge of-stock-foto
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THE MOON, EARTH - 6 April 2026 – Captured by the Artemis II crew during their lunar flyby on April 6, 2026, this image shows the Moon fully eclipsing the Sun. From the crew’s perspective, the Moon appears large enough to completely block the Sun, creating nearly 54 minutes of totality and extending the view far beyond what is possible from Earth. The corona forms a glowing halo around the dark lunar disk, revealing details of the Sun’s outer atmosphere typically hidden by its brightness. Also visible are stars, typically too faint to see when imaging the Moon, but with the Moon in darkness sta-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026 – Captured by the Artemis II crew during their lunar flyby on April 6, 2026, this image shows the Moon fully eclipsing the Sun. From the crew’s perspective, the Moon appears large enough to completely block the Sun, creating nearly 54 minutes of totality and extending the view far beyond what is possible from Earth. The corona forms a glowing halo around the dark lunar disk, revealing details of the Sun’s outer atmosphere typically hidden by its brightness. Also visible are stars, typically too faint to see when imaging the Moon, but with the Moon in darkness stars are readily im-stock-foto
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Artemis II in Eclipse: Captured during the lunar flyby, this image shows the Moon fully eclipsing the Sun. From the crew’s perspective, the Moon blocks the Sun for 54 minutes of totality. The corona forms a glowing halo, revealing the Sun’s outer atmosphere. In the darkness, stars and the lunar nearside—lit by Earthshine—are visible. This unique vantage point offers a rare look at the solar corona as humanity returns to deep space. 7 April 2026  An optimised high-resolution version of an original NASA image: Credit: NASA / Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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THE MOON, EARTH - 6 April 2026 – NASA’s Orion spacecraft is seen in the foreground, lit up by the Sun. A first quarter Moon is visible behind it, with sunlight coming from the right. Near the bottom right edge of the Moon, Orientale basin stands out with a black patch of ancient lava in its center. A 600-mile-wide impact crater ringed by mountains, Orientale straddles the near and far sides of the Moon - Photo: Geopix/NASA-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026 – Earth appears tiny as the Moon looms large in this photo taken by the Artemis II crew during their lunar flyby on April 6, 2026.  Taken 36 minutes before Earthset, our home planet is visible in the blackness of space off the limb of the illuminated Moon. Earth is in a crescent phase, with sunlight coming from the right. Orientale mare basin, with its dark floor of cooled lava and outer rings of mountains, covers nearly the lower third of the imaged lunar surface. Different colors in the mare hint at its mineral composition.-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026 – Earth appears tiny as the Moon looms large in this photo taken by the Artemis II crew during their lunar flyby on April 6, 2026.  Taken 36 minutes before Earthset, our home planet is visible in the blackness of space off the limb of the illuminated Moon. Earth is in a crescent phase, with sunlight coming from the right. Orientale mare basin, with its dark floor of cooled lava and outer rings of mountains, covers nearly the lower third of the imaged lunar surface. Different colors in the mare hint at its mineral composition.-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026 – Earth appears tiny as the Moon looms large in this photo taken by the Artemis II crew during their lunar flyby on April 6, 2026.  Taken 36 minutes before Earthset, our home planet is visible in the blackness of space off the limb of the illuminated Moon. Earth is in a crescent phase, with sunlight coming from the right. Orientale mare basin, with its dark floor of cooled lava and outer rings of mountains, covers nearly the lower third of the imaged lunar surface. Different colors in the mare hint at its mineral composition.-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026 – The Artemis II crew captures a portion of the Moon coming into view along the terminator – the boundary between lunar day and night – where low-angle sunlight casts long, dramatic shadows across the surface. This grazing light accentuates the Moon’s rugged topography, revealing craters, ridges, and basin structures in striking detail. Features along the terminator such as Jule Crater, Birkhoff Crater, Stebbins Crater, and surrounding highlands stand out. From this perspective, the interplay of light and shadow highlights the complexity of the lunar surface in ways not visible u-stock-foto
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April 6 2026: A close-up view from the Orion spacecraft during the Artemis II crews lunar flyby on April 6, 2026, captures a total solar eclipse, with only part of the Moon visible in the frame as it fully obscures the Sun. We see a glowing halo around the dark lunar disk. The science community is investigating whether this effect is due to the corona, zodiacal light, or a combination of the two. From this deep-space vantage point, the Moon appeared large enough to sustain nearly 54 minutes of totality, far longer than total solar eclipses typically seen from Earth. The bright silver glint on-stock-foto
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April 6, 2026: Captured from the Orion spacecraft near the end of the Artemis II lunar flyby on April 6, this image shows the Sun beginning to peek out from behind the Moon as the eclipse transitions out of totality. Only a portion of the Moon is visible in frame, its curved edge revealing a bright sliver of sunlight returning after nearly an hour of darkness. In final moments of the eclipse observed by the crew, the reemerging light creates a sharp contrast against the Moons silhouette and reveals lunar topography not usually visible along the lunar limb. This fleeting phase captures the dyna-stock-foto
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Orion Capsule, Outer Space. 06 April, 2026. The Moon, backlit by the Sun during a solar eclipse, photographed by the Orion spacecraft external camera mounted on the solar array as the Artemis II mission approaches the Moon showing on day 6 of the mission around the far side of the moon, April 6, 2026, from Space. Earth is reflecting sunlight at the left edge of the Moon, which is slightly brighter than the rest of the disk. The bright spot visible just below the Moon's bottom right edge is Saturn. Beyond that, the bright spot at the right edge of the image is Mars. Credit: NASA/NASA/Alamy Live-stock-foto
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NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman took this picture of Earth from the Orion spacecraft's window on April 2, 2026, after completing the translunar injection burn. NASA/Reid Wiseman-stock-foto
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Earth is seen from the window of NASA’s Orion spacecraft during the Artemis II mission on April 2, 2026. The image, taken by mission commander Reid Wiseman after the translunar injection burn, shows auroras at upper right and lower left, with zodiacal light visible at lower right as Earth eclipses the Sun. Credit: NASA/Reid Wiseman-stock-foto
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Hello, Earth-stock-foto
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Mysterious red blood moon during total lunar eclipse hangs in dark night sky. beautiful celestial astronomy event viewed from earth against backdrop o-stock-foto
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A total lunar eclipse photographed from Perth, Western Australia. The red colour of the moon is caused by Rayleigh scattering of light.-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured near the end of the hour-long totality.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:46 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º. The Moon was in Leo and a few of the field stars show up though none were bright near the Moon.   The Moon moved across the southern half of the umbra at this eclipse so the southern (bottom) edge of the Moon remained bright throughout totality.   Clouds dimmed or outright obscured the Moon during much of totality. I shot this during a brief clearing in the clouds.   Technical: This is a single 30-secon-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured about 20 minutes into the hour-long totality.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:22 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º. The Moon was in Leo and a few of the field stars show up though none were bright near the Moon.   The Moon moved across the southern half of the umbra at this eclipse so the southern (bottom) edge of the Moon remained bright throughout totality.   By this time light clouds had moved in and were muting the colours and contrast. I shot this frame during a slight clearing in the clouds. But the cloud-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, amid stars and captured six minutes into the hour-long totality, with the Moon's southeastern limb still bright near the edge of the umbral shadow.  The Moon was amid high cloud which added the corona-like glow around the Moon. Eventually the clouds won out and the Moon disappeared before the end of totality. The Moon was in Leo and despite the cloud the field stars show up around the Moon, though none were bright. The brightest is 56 Leonis at left at 6th magnitude.   This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:10 am MST. The field-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured just aftter the start of the hour-long totality.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:05 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º. The Moon was in Leo and a few of the field stars show up though none were bright near the Moon.   By this time light clouds had moved in, but not so much as to dim the Moon too much at this point, but the cloud did mute the colours. But clouds did spoil later images during totality and prevented a full sequence of the last half of the eciipse.   Technical: This is a single 10-second exposure wi-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, in a sequence over 30 minutes, through the mid-partial phase to totality.  It shows the progression from left to right of the Moon entering the dark inner umbral shadow of the Earth and turning more and more red. The red colour in the umbra is from the light of all the sunsets and sunrises going on around the Earth.   However, the boundary between the red umbra and bright part of the Moon in the penumbra appears a pale blue-pink or magenta colour, from the effect of ozone in the upper atmosphere of Earth absorbing red light.   The Moon pa-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured close to the time of the start of totality, or "U2.," with the Moon's southeastern limb still bright near the edge of the umbral shadow. The bright edge shows a band of blue, usually created by ozone absorption in Earth's upper atmosphere.  This was near "second contact" and so is sort of a "lunar diamond ring!"   This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:04 am MST. The field is 3.8º by 2.5º. The Moon was in Leo and some of the field stars show up though none were bright near the Moon. The brightest is 56 Leonis at left a-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase just 2 minutes before start of the hour-long totality. U2 = the start of totality. Just a thin sliver of normal sunlight remains on the Moon's southeastern limb but most of the lunar disk is in the umbra shadow. The boundary of the umbra at the edge of the sunlit portion looks a paler blue-pink.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 4:02 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #6 of 6 in a series taken at roughly 5 minute intervals as the Moon entered the umbral shadow.   Technical: This i-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase 6 minutes before the start of the hour-long totality, with just a small sliver of the Moon's disk at the southeastern limb still lit by "normal" sunlight, though that area is still in the penumbral shadow of the Earth. The rest of the disk is within the dark red umbral shadow. The boundary area between the umbra and penumbral shadow looks a pale blue-pink colour.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 3:58 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #5 of 6 in a series taken at roughly 5 minute-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase 11 minutes before the start of the hour-long totality, with just a small portion of the Moon's disk at the southeastern limb still lit by "normal" sunlight, though that area is still in the penumbral shadow of the Earth. The rest of the disk is within the dark red umbral shadow. The boundary area between the umbra and penumbral shadow looks a pale blue-pink colour.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 3:53 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #4 of 6 in a series taken at roughly 5 minu-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase 16 minutes before the start of the hour-long totality, with a large portion of the Moon's disk at the southeastern limb still lit by "normal" sunlight, though that area is still in the penumbral shadow of the Earth. The rest of the disk is within the dark red umbral shadow. The boundary area between the umbra and penumbral shadow looks a pale blue-pink colour.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 3:48 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #3 of 6 in a series taken at roughly 5 minute in-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase 21 minutes before the start of the hour-long totality, with a large portion of the Moon's eastern side still lit by "normal" sunlight, though that area is still in the penumbral shadow of the Earth. The rest of the disk is within the dark red umbral shadow. The boundary area between the umbra and penumbral shadow looks a pale blue-pink colour.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 3:43 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #2 of 6 in a series taken at roughly 5 minute intervals as the Mo-stock-foto
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This is the total eclipse of the Moon of March 3, 2026, captured during the partial phase nearly half an hour  - 28 minutes - before the start of the hour-long totality, with a large portion of the eastern side of the Moon's disk still lit by "normal" sunlight, though that area is still in the penumbral shadow of the Earth. The rest of the disk is within the dark red umbral shadow. The boundary area between the umbra and penumbral shadow looks a pale blue-pink colour.  This was from home in southern Alberta at about 3:35 am MST. The field is 1.3º by 0.9º.   This is #1 of 6 in a series taken at-stock-foto
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March 3, 2026, Tehatta, West Bengal, India: The Worm Moon total lunar eclipse, the last full moon of winter, the Moon moves from right to left as it passes through Earth's shadow. In India, the Moon rises later in the evening, so the final phase of the eclipse was visible. In India, the eclipse began at 3:20 PM and ended at 6:47 PM. During this rare celestial event, the Moon was taking on a coppery red hue, often referred to as a ''Blood Moon, '' which will be observable from a banana plantation in Tehatta. (Credit Image: © Soumyabrata Roy/Pacific Press via ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONL-stock-foto
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March 3, 2026, Tehatta, West Bengal, India: The Worm Moon total lunar eclipse, the last full moon of winter, the Moon moves from right to left as it passes through Earth's shadow. In India, the Moon rises later in the evening, so the final phase of the eclipse was visible. In India, the eclipse began at 3:20 PM and ended at 6:47 PM. During this rare celestial event, the Moon was taking on a coppery red hue, often referred to as a ''Blood Moon, '' which will be observable from a banana plantation in Tehatta. (Credit Image: © Soumyabrata Roy/Pacific Press via ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONL-stock-foto
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March 3, 2026, Tehatta, West Bengal, India: The Worm Moon total lunar eclipse, the last full moon of winter, the Moon moves from right to left as it passes through Earth's shadow. In India, the Moon rises later in the evening, so the final phase of the eclipse was visible. In India, the eclipse began at 3:20 PM and ended at 6:47 PM. During this rare celestial event, the Moon was taking on a coppery red hue, often referred to as a ''Blood Moon, '' which will be observable from a banana plantation in Tehatta. (Credit Image: © Soumyabrata Roy/Pacific Press via ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONL-stock-foto
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Tehatta, India. 03rd Mar, 2026. The Worm Moon total lunar eclipse, the last full moon of winter, the Moon moves from right to left as it passes through Earth's shadow. In India, the Moon rises later in the evening, so the final phase of the eclipse was visible. In India, the eclipse began at 3:20 PM and ended at 6:47 PM. During this rare celestial event, the Moon was taking on a coppery red hue, often referred to as a "Blood Moon," which will be observable from a banana plantation in Tehatta. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/Pacific Press) Credit: Pacific Press Media Production Corp./Alamy Live News-stock-foto
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Tehatta, India. 03rd Mar, 2026. The Worm Moon total lunar eclipse, the last full moon of winter, the Moon moves from right to left as it passes through Earth's shadow. In India, the Moon rises later in the evening, so the final phase of the eclipse was visible. In India, the eclipse began at 3:20 PM and ended at 6:47 PM. During this rare celestial event, the Moon was taking on a coppery red hue, often referred to as a "Blood Moon," which will be observable from a banana plantation in Tehatta. (Photo by Soumyabrata Roy/Pacific Press) Credit: Pacific Press Media Production Corp./Alamy Live News-stock-foto