The moon during the full lunar eclipse on May 15|Steve FUNG|CC BY-SA 2.0

The total lunar eclipse on Tuesday will be the last one for the next three years. The moon will turn red as it will slip into Earth’s shadow—called a blood moon.

The eclipse will be visible in North and Central America, Asia, Australia, the Pacific Islands and parts of South America. This will be the second total lunar eclipse of this year, the first was in May.

Across the country, the totality—when the Earth’s shadow covers the moon—will last for an hour and a half, from 5:16 a.m. to 6:41 a.m. EST.