Published: Jan. 5, 2000

The Sommers-Bausch Observatory at the University of Colorado at Â鶹¹ÙÍø will be open to the public, weather permitting, from 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 20, to view the centuryÂ’s first total eclipse of the moon.

The lunar eclipse begins when the full moon enters the EarthÂ’s shadow at 8:05 p.m. and will be totally eclipsed by 9:09 p.m. The total eclipse will last until 10:22 p.m., but at 9:48 p.m. it will be deepest into EarthÂ’s shadow and will be about one ten-thousandth as bright as it was earlier in the evening.

"At the observatory we will be watching the eclipse through a telescope, but it will also be viewable without one," said Keith Gleason, laboratory coordinator of Sommers-Bausch Observatory. "The night will go from being lit up by a full moon, to being very dark in just over an hour. It will be a very eerie night if itÂ’s clear."

Gleason explained that if the sky is clear, it will be the first time since Dec. 9, 1992, that a total lunar eclipse has been visible in Colorado without cloud cover. Such eclipses usually occur about every 32 full moons, he said, with the next one being May 15, 2003.

"If you look around the sky that night between 9:09 p.m. and 10:22 p.m., the moon will look like a coppery penny in the sky," Gleason said.

He explained that the moon takes on a reddish, coppery color because most of the sunlight is blocked out by the EarthÂ’s shadow. However, some light "leaks" around the rim of the Earth during the eclipse and shines onto the moon making it appear dark red.

There is no charge to visit the observatory, adjacent to Fiske Planetarium on the CU-Â鶹¹ÙÍø campus. For more information about the eclipse or the observatory, see .