When we stand in the sunlight, the rays of the Sun fall on us and we can see our shadows. Exactly like this, shadows of the Earth and the Moon are also formed in the space due to the Sun rays falling on them. Since the Earth and the Moon are spherical in shape, their shadows are conical in shape. These shadows are very long. The larger the distance of a body from the Sun, the longer will be its shadow. Lunar eclipse is darkness on the Moon due to the Earth’s shadow over a portion of it.

          While making their revolutions, the Sun, the Earth, and the Moon come in a straight line and the Earth sometimes comes in between the Sun and the Moon, thus the shadow of the Earth falls on the Moon. In other words, the Sunlight does not fall on the Moon when the Earth comes in between the two. The portion over which the shadow falls becomes dark. This is called lunar eclipse. Such a situation occurs only on Purnima (full Moon) days. Therefore, the lunar eclipse takes place only on that day. If the Earth’s shadow covers the entire Moon, it is total lunar eclipse. If the shadow covers only a part of the Moon, it is partial eclipse. Generally, there are three lunar eclipses in a year, out of which one is a total lunar eclipse.

             Now the question arises: when the full Moon comes every month, why does lunar eclipse not take place every month? The reason is that the plane of the Moon’s orbit makes an angle of 5° with the plane of the Earth’s orbit. Consequently, the Moon revolves either above or below the Earth’s shadow. So, it is only twice or thrice a year that all the three – the Sun, the Moon, and the Earth – come in one straight line. Hence the lunar eclipse does not take place every month. Astronomers, using mathematical calculations, easily predict the time and duration of the lunar eclipse.