Early tomorrow morning this months full moon, known as the Flower Moon, will undergo a total eclipse. At that same time as the eclipse, the moon will be near that point in its orbit closest to earth, which means we’ll see a “Supermoon” as well. The Lunar Eclipse, which will be visible from Southeast Asia, Australia, New Zealand, the Pacific And The western part of the Americas, begins Wednesday at 1:47 a.m. Pacific time and will last about five hours from start to finish.
The total phase of the eclipse, when the moon is covered in earth’s blood-red shadow, begins at 4:25 a.m. Pacific Time (1125 gmt) and lasts 14 minutes 30 seconds.