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March
19, 2011:
Mark your calendar.
On March 19th, a
full Moon of rare
size and beauty will
rise in the east at
sunset. It's a super
"perigee moon"--the
biggest in almost 20
years.
"The last full Moon
so big and close to
Earth occurred in
March of 1993," says
Geoff Chester of the
US Naval Observatory
in Washington DC.
"I'd say it's worth
a look."
Full Moons vary in
size because of the
oval shape of the
Moon's orbit. It is
an ellipse with one
side (perigee) about
50,000 km closer to
Earth than the other
(apogee): diagram.
Nearby perigee moons
are about 14% bigger
and 30% brighter
than lesser moons
that occur on the
apogee side of the
Moon's orbit.
 |
|
Click on
photo to
go to
YouTube
video
from
Science
News at
NASA |
"The full Moon of
March 19th occurs
less than one hour
away from perigee--a
near-perfect
coincidence1 that
happens only 18
years or so," adds
Chester.
A
perigee full Moon
brings with it
extra-high "perigean
tides," but this is
nothing to worry
about, according to
NOAA. In most
places, lunar
gravity at perigee
pulls tide waters
only a few
centimeters (an inch
or so) higher than
usual. Local
geography can
amplify the effect
to about 15
centimeters (six
inches)--not exactly
a great flood.
The Moon looks
extra-big when it is
beaming through
foreground
objects--a.k.a. "the
Moon illusion."
Indeed, contrary to
some reports
circulating the
Internet, perigee
Moons do not trigger
natural disasters.
The "super moon" of
March 1983, for
instance, passed
without incident.
And an almost-super
Moon in Dec. 2008
also proved
harmless.
Okay, the Moon is
14% bigger than
usual, but can you
really tell the
difference? It's
tricky. There are no
rulers floating in
the sky to measure
lunar diameters.
Hanging high
overhead with no
reference points to
provide a sense of
scale, one full Moon
can seem much like
any other.
The best time to
look is when the
Moon is near the
horizon. That is
when illusion mixes
with reality to
produce a truly
stunning view. For
reasons not fully
understood by
astronomers or
psychologists,
low-hanging Moons
look unnaturally
large when they beam
through trees,
buildings and other
foreground objects.
On March 19th, why
not let the "Moon
illusion" amplify a
full Moon that's
extra-big to begin
with? The swollen
orb rising in the
east at sunset may
seem so nearby, you
can almost reach out
and touch it.
Don't bother. Even a
super perigee Moon
is still 356,577 km
away. That is, it
turns out, a
distance of rare
beauty. |