These are pictures I took of the Dec. 21, 2010 lunar eclipse.
They were taken with a Fujifilm Finepix digital camera
through an 8-inch Skywatcher telescope.

You'll notice the moon turns a reddish-orange as it nears totality;
this is the result of the sunlight being refracted through the Earth's atmosphere.

Enjoy!





1:35 A.M. It's just starting. This and the next two pictures have some glare from the moonlight; it gets better.





1:45 A.M.





2:15 A.M. About halfway there...





2:35 A.M. Little more than three-quarters... I changed my camera angle, in case you noticed the crescent changed position.





2:40 A.M. Almost there; it looks like Mars.





2:45 A.M. So close, another 20 minutes. To the left you can see two stars the camera picked up; I could see plenty.





2:50 A.M. This and the picture after it were taken at the same time with two different shutter speeds.









3:00 A.M. Another 15 or so minutes...





3:15 A.M. Total eclipse.





3:17 A.M. Total eclipse, and the last picture that had any light to develop for a bit.





3:40 A.M. Just starting to come out of the eclipse, and probably the best shot I took all night.





4:00 A.M. And so ends the last lunar eclipse to happen on the winter solstice for the next while!



Thanks for looking!