Full moons come and go each month, but supermoons come only once a year. And this Sunday is the supermoon's time to shine. At 7 a.m. ET, the moon will not only be bright and full, but it will also be at its closest distance to Earth. If it's a clear night (or day), take a step outside for the largest full moon that you'll see until August 2014. But wait, why isn't there a supermoon more often? After all, the moon orbits Earth every month. If the moon is at its closest point now, it should be at the closest point next month too. Bruce McClure and Deborah Byrd at earthsky.org write that the supermoon's coming only once a year depends on how "month" is defined. If you're watching the moon change phases from full to new and back to full again, you're dealing with the synodic month. The phase of the moon is determined by its position relative to Earth and the sun. If the moon is sandwiched directly between the sun and Earth, you get a full moon. The synodic month is a little more than 29 days long. Super Shots of the Supermoon Watch Video Supermoon Photos 2012 Watch Video Lunar Eclipse Thrills Onlookers Watch Video Supermoon vs. Blue Moon: Photos of Blue Moons Around the World If you're on the moon and are recording how long it takes to make one revolution around Earth, you're dealing with the anomalistic month. Since Earth isn't in the exact center of the moon's elliptical orbit, there is a point at which the moon is at its farthest point from Earth (the apogee) and a point at which it's at its closest point (the perigee). The anomalistic month is a little more than 27 days along. That two-day difference causes the two different types of months to be out of sync. For this weekend's moon, the full moon happens to coincide with the moon's perigee, resulting in the supermoon. Similarly, there will be times when the full moon occurs at the moon's apogee, where it will look smaller than usual. "Smaller than usual" isn't actually that different, though. According to space.com, there's only a 12 percent difference in distance between the moon's perigee and apogee. But If you want to snap your own photo of a gigantic moon, try doing so close to sunrise. The moon hasn't magically grown in size, but it will be near the horizon. You'll see it looming over trees and buildings, which will make it appear bigger to our own eyes. via Science - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGjpA_Qhg7RT9Bhy7LHg9Aou5S7Gw&url=http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/supermoon-sunday-window-brightened-sky/story?id=19456312 | |||
| |||
| |||
|
Home »Unlabelled » Supermoon This Sunday: Look Out the Window to See Brightened Sky - ABC News
Friday 21 June 2013
Supermoon This Sunday: Look Out the Window to See Brightened Sky - ABC News
Debarjun Saha | 10:32 |
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
#
Popular Posts
-
PTI : Washington, Tue Oct 01 2013, 15:42 hrs < img src="http://static.indianexpress.com/m-image...
-
The High Altitude Venus Operational Concept program would eventually send a manned mission to the atmosp...
-
http://aggressiveseiag.cryptoumoneybox.cn
-
The same day that Amazon announced a trial run of its delivery by drone service in India , a couple of MIT...
-
Biologist Vladimir Dinets spent years studying the behaviour of crocodiles He saw crocodiles pushing ...
-
https://cryptstonener.com/5?kjBhVgFCcgd*grfhGVjhbNJNHGBVTFrDCRT*tfRcgH
-
Hi there! I regret to inform you about some sad news for you. Approximately a month or two ago I have succeeded to gain a total access t...
-
First private DNA forensic lab in India's ...
-
Hi! Sadly, there are some bad news that you are about to hear. About few months ago I have gained a full access to all devices used by y...
-
Redirect Notice Redirect Notice The previous page is se...
No comments:
Post a Comment