Home   Sun, Moon & Space   Eclipses   Aug 17, 2027
Flag for Antarctica

August 17, 2027 — Penumbral Lunar Eclipse — Australian Antarctic Territory, Antarctica

Aug 17, 2027 at 2:47 pm
Max View in Australian Antarctic Territory
Global Event: Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
Local Type: Penumbral Lunar Eclipse, in Australian Antarctic Territory
Begins: Tue, Aug 17, 2027 at 2:33 pm
Maximum: Tue, Aug 17, 2027 at 2:47 pm -0.935 Magnitude
Ends: Tue, Aug 17, 2027 at 3:03 pm
Duration: 30 minutes

All times shown on this page are local time.

Location

August 17, 2027 — Penumbral Lunar Eclipse — Australian Antarctic Territory

Live Eclipse Animation will start at:
Live Eclipse Animation has ended.
You are using an outdated browser, to view the animation please update or switch to a modern browser. Alternatively you can view the old animation by clicking here.

The animation shows what the eclipse approximately looks like. Stages and times of the eclipse are outlined below.

TimePhaseEventDirectionAltitude
11:24 am Tue, Aug 17Not directly visiblePenumbral Eclipse begins Below horizonMap direction South 188°
-2.1°
1:13 pm Tue, Aug 17Not directly visibleMaximum Eclipse Below horizonMap direction South-southeast 162°
-1.9°
2:33 pm Tue, Aug 17RisingMoonrise RisingMap direction Southeast 143°
-0.2°
2:47 pm Tue, Aug 17
Maximum in Australian Antarctic Territory This is the moment when the eclipse reaches its greatest magnitude while the entire Moon is above the horizon in Australian Antarctic Territory. The true maximum point of this eclipse cannot be seen in Australian Antarctic Territory because the Moon is below the horizon at that time.
Since the Moon is near the horizon at this time, we recommend going to a high point or finding an unobstructed area with free sight to Southeast for the best view of the eclipse.
Map direction Southeast 140°
0.2°
3:03 pm Tue, Aug 17
Penumbral Eclipse ends The Earth's penumbra ends.
Moon close to horizon, recommend going to a high point.
Map direction Southeast 136°
0.7°

The curvature of the shadow's path and the apparent rotation of the Moon's disk is due to the Earth's rotation.


Eclipses and Transits Visible in Australian Antarctic Territory

Eclipse Visibility From Australian Antarctic TerritoryVisibility Worldwide
Sep 7–8, 2025 Total Lunar EclipseTotal Lunar Eclipse
Feb 17, 2026 Partial Solar EclipseAnnular Solar Eclipse
Mar 3, 2026 Penumbral Lunar EclipseTotal Lunar Eclipse
Aug 28, 2026 Penumbral Lunar EclipsePartial Lunar Eclipse
Feb 21, 2027 Penumbral Lunar EclipsePenumbral Lunar Eclipse

Note: Click on the date link for details in Australian Antarctic Territory, or the path map image for global details.

Next annular eclipse visible in Australian Antarctic Territory

Other eclipses visible in Australian Antarctic Territory

Other eclipses worldwide