The Moon glides through Earth's faint outer (penumbral) shadow — a subtle shading across the disk rather than a dark bite, best seen as a gentle dimming.
Where it’s visible
East Indies, Australia, Pacific
Geometry & timing
Greatest eclipse (TD)
11:45:17 · ΔT 78s
Greatest eclipse (UTC)
11:43:59
Saros series
150
Magnitude
0.1292 / -0.8199 (penumbral / umbral)
Moon overhead at greatest
21°S, 176°W
Phase durations
95.6 min
Sources
Timing and geometry from NASA’s eclipse catalogs. Verify local circumstances before you travel.
Schematic of the Moon crossing Earth’s penumbra (outer) and umbra (inner) at greatest eclipse. Visible anywhere the Moon is above the horizon: East Indies, Australia, Pacific.
The Moon is above the horizon — and the eclipse visible — on the marker’s side of the dashed line (its position at greatest eclipse).
More eclipses
Related events — same Saros family and nearby dates.