Penumbral Lunar Eclipse on Fri, 5 June 2020 – Path & Viewing Guide
Global Eclipse Conditions
A penumbral lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes through Earth’s outer penumbral shadow without entering the darker umbra. This type of eclipse is subtle, often going unnoticed unless a large portion of the Moon is shadowed. The eclipse begins at 07:48 (GMT-10), as the Moon enters the penumbra and gradually dims. It reaches its maximum at 09:26, with about 57% of the lunar disk in shadow. The Moon then slowly exits the penumbra, and the eclipse ends at 11:05. No portion of the Moon enters the darker umbral shadow during this event.Local Eclipse Phase Times
| Phase | Time (GMT-10) | Local Visibility | 
|---|---|---|
| Penumbral Eclipse Begins | 07:48 | - | 
| The maximum eclipse occurs at 09:26. The eclipse is penumbral with 57% coverage. | ||
| Penumbral Eclipse Ends | 11:05 | - | 
Global Eclipse Path
Local Eclipse Conditions at (GMT-10)
Earth's Shadow and Moon relative positions.
                Local Eclipse Parameters
| Eclipse Phase | |
| Penumbral Magnitude | |
| Umbral Magnitude | |
| Penumbral Coverage | |
| Umbral Coverage | |
| Umbra Size, km | |
| Penumbra Size, km | |
| Distance to Shadow Center, km | 
Observation Parameters
| Time | |
| Latitude | 37.3541 | 
| Longitude | -121.955 | 
| Moon Elevation | -121.955 | 
| Moon Azimuth | -121.955 |