Home   Sun, Moon & Space   Eclipses   USA   Alaska   Nome   Aug 17, 2027
Flag for USA

August 16, 2027 — Penumbral Lunar Eclipse — Nome, AK, USA

Aug 16, 2027 at 11:13 pm
Max View in Nome, Alaska
Global Event: Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
Local Type: Penumbral Lunar Eclipse in Nome, Alaska
Begins: Mon, Aug 16, 2027 at 10:54 pm
Maximum: Mon, Aug 16, 2027 at 11:13 pm -0.526 Magnitude
Ends: Tue, Aug 17, 2027 at 1:03 am
Duration: 2 hours, 8 minutes

All times shown on this page are local time.

August 16–17, 2027 — Penumbral Lunar Eclipse — Nome

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.

The animation shows what the eclipse approximately looks like in Nome. Stages and times of the eclipse are outlined below. All times are local time (AKDT) for Nome.

Time Phase Event Direction Altitude
9:24 pm Mon, Aug 16 Not directly visible Penumbral Eclipse begins Below horizon Map direction East 100°
-9.9°
10:54 pm Mon, Aug 16 Rising Moonrise Rising, but the combination of a very low moon and the total eclipse phase will make the moon so dim that it will be extremely difficult to view until moon gets higher in the sky or the total phase ends. Map direction East-southeast 120°
-0.2°
11:13 pm Mon, Aug 16
Maximum Eclipse Moon is closest to the center of the shadow.
Moon close to horizon, recommend going to a high point.
Additionally, the eclipsed moon combined with dimming near horizon might make the Moon very hard or impossible to see.
Map direction Southeast 124°
1.3°
1:03 am Tue, Aug 17
Penumbral Eclipse ends The Earth's penumbra ends.
Moon close to horizon, so make sure you have free sight to South-southeast.
Map direction South-southeast 149°
9.2°

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

During this penumbral lunar eclipse, the Earth's main shadow does not cover the Moon. As the Earth's shadow (umbra) misses the Moon during a penumbral lunar eclipse, there are no other locations on Earth where the Moon appears partially or totally eclipsed during this event. A penumbral lunar eclipse can be a bit hard to see as the shadowed part is only a little bit fainter than the rest of the Moon.


Eclipses and Transits Visible in Nome

Eclipse Visibility From Nome Visibility Worldwide
Mar 2–3, 2026 Total Lunar Eclipse Total Lunar Eclipse
Aug 12, 2026 Partial Solar Eclipse Total Solar Eclipse
Aug 27, 2026 Penumbral Lunar Eclipse Partial Lunar Eclipse
Aug 16–17, 2027 Penumbral Lunar Eclipse Penumbral Lunar Eclipse
Jan 11, 2028 Partial Lunar Eclipse Partial Lunar Eclipse

Note: Click on the date link for details in Nome, or the path map image for global details. Currently shown eclipse is highlighted.

Next total solar eclipse visible in Nome

Next annular eclipse visible in Nome

Other eclipses visible in Nome

Other eclipses worldwide