Those who glanced up at the sky Thursday night had an opportunity to catch the March 2025 “Blood Moon,” a phenomenon that colors the full moon in shades of red, orange and yellow during a total lunar eclipse.
This month’s full moon was due to pass through the shadow of Earth either late Thursday night or very early Friday morning, depending on the viewer’s time zone. It was visible to people in the Americas and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere.
Dubbed the “Worm Moon” by the Farmer’s Almanac, which has been assigning names to full moons for almost a century, this one is expected to last through Saturday morning, according to NASA. The full moon technically rose in its totality early Friday.
Here’s what to know about the event — and why the moon showed a new hue when it happened.
Why was the moon red, orange and yellow?
The moon appeared to turn red as Earth passed directly between it and the sun in what’s known as a total lunar eclipse. Their perfect alignment darkens the moon, from the perspective of folks looking up, because our planet’s position blocks most sunlight from reaching it.
Some light still makes its way to the moon’s surface, but only certain shades of it. The colors that wind up there are longer wavelengths of light — red, orange, yellow — which withstood the journey through “a thick slice of Earth’s atmosphere,” NASA said.
Shorter wavelengths of the color spectrum, like blue, scatter easily when they hit the atmosphere. That’s why a vast sky can look blue in the middle of the day, when sunlight can shine straight down from overhead. Longer wavelengths materialize on Earth when sunlight hits from more of a perpendicular angle, so its route through our atmosphere can be more extensive. Short wavelengths are essentially filtered out by the atmosphere over such a protracted distance, and only the longer reds, oranges and yellows remain.
What is a “Blood Moon”?
“Blood Moon” is a nickname that refers to the moon’s reddish appearance during a total lunar eclipse.
The full moon takes on several shades of red, orange and yellow when it’s nearer the outer edges of Earth’s shadow — when it first intersects with the path of Earth’s shadow, for example, and as it’s on its way out. But shades of deep red will become more pronounced as the moon enters the darkest part of the shadow.
What exactly causes a “Blood Moon”?
A “Blood Moon” happens during a total lunar eclipse, when the sun, Earth and the moon align in that order. Long wavelengths of sunlight are refracted through Earth’s atmosphere before reaching the moon, which reflects them in reddish hues that may resemble the color of blood.
How to see the “Blood Moon” lunar eclipse
The upcoming “Blood Moon” will begin before the full moon reaches its brightness point tonight.
As the lunar eclipse gets underway, the moon will start moving through Earth’s shadow at 11:57 p.m. EDT. It will become steadily dimmer over the next several hours as it travels toward the darkest part of the shadow and, eventually, appear fully darkened from around 2:26 p.m. to 3:31 a.m. in the early hours of Friday. The most ideal opportunity to see the reddish moon is during the minutes leading up to 3 a.m. EDT, as the moon should be situated in the center of Earth’s shadow around then.
Emily Mae Czachor is a news editor at CBSNews.com. She typically covers breaking news, extreme weather and issues involving social and criminal justice. Emily Mae previously wrote for outlets like the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
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