"The supermoon is a 16-inch pizza compared with a 15-inch pizza. It's a slightly bigger moon; I ain't using the adjective 'supermoon.'" -Neil deGrasse Tyson
Earlier this month, the full Moon was the first "Supermoon" we've seen all year, where the bright full Moon coincided nearly perfectly with perigee, or the Moon's closest approach to Earth. Yet it won't be the last: November's and December's full Moons will also be Supermoons, appearing up to 14% bigger and 30% brighter than the full Moons from, say, March and April of this year.
This isn't a rarity, either: Supermoons always come in a row, and we usually get three in a row at that. Moreover, they don't happen at the same time every year, but appear on a cycle that's 411 days long. What's the cause of this, and why does the Moon behave as it does?
- Log in to post comments
It did look quite impressive the other morning on my drive to work. But I figured that was just due to air clarity and the half-lighting of the dawn. Now that I know the effect is real, I'm looking forward to November.
Don't knock that extra 7% of pizza, Neil.
We had a chance to snap a few photos of the November 2016 "supermoon" with our 11" Celestron telescope: http://www.o3p.com/threads/photos-of-the-november-13-2016-supermoon.779/