|

A
Moon Illusion for June's
Full Moon - Solstice Moon
June 16 , 2008:
Sometimes you just can't
believe your eyes. This
week is one of those
times.
On Wednesday night,
June 18th, step outside
at sunset and look
around. You'll see a
giant form rising in the
east. At first glance it
looks like the full Moon.
It has craters and seas
and the face of a man,
but this "moon" is
strangely inflated. It's
huge!
You've just
experienced the Moon
Illusion.
There's no better time
to see it. The full Moon
of June 18th is a
"solstice moon", coming
only two days before the
beginning of northern
summer. This is
significant because the
sun and full Moon are
like kids on a see-saw;
when one is high, the
other is low. This week's
high solstice sun gives
us a low, horizon-hugging
Moon and a strong Moon
Illusion.
Sky watchers have
known for thousands of
years that low-hanging
moons look unnaturally
big. At first,
astronomers thought the
atmosphere must be
magnifying the Moon near
the horizon, but cameras
showed that is not the
case.
Moons on film are the
same size regardless of
elevation. Apparently,
only human beings see
giant moons.
Are we crazy?
After all these years,
scientists still aren't
sure. When you look at
the Moon, rays of
moonlight converge and
form an image about 0.15
mm wide on the retina in
the back of your eye.
High moons and low moons
make the same sized spot,
yet the brain insists one
is bigger than the other.
Go figure.
A similar illusion was
discovered in 1913 by
Mario Ponzo, who drew two
identical bars across a
pair of converging lines,
like the railroad tracks
pictured right. The upper
yellow bar looks wider
because it spans a
greater apparent distance
between the rails. This
is the "Ponzo Illusion."
Right: The Ponzo
Illusion. Image credit:
Dr. Tony Phillips.
Some researchers
believe that the Moon
Illusion is
Ponzo's Illusion, with
trees and houses playing
the role of Ponzo's
converging lines.
Foreground objects trick
your brain into thinking
the Moon is bigger than
it really is.
But there's a problem:
Airline pilots flying at
very high altitudes
sometimes experience the
Moon Illusion without any
objects in the
foreground. What tricks
their eyes?
Maybe it's the shape
of the sky. Humans
perceive the sky as a
flattened dome, with the
zenith nearby and the
horizon far away. It
makes sense; birds flying
overhead are closer than
birds on the horizon.
When the moon is near the
horizon, your brain,
trained by watching birds
(and clouds and
airplanes), miscalculates
the Moon's true distance
and size.
Below: The
"flattened sky" model for
the Moon Illusion.
Source:
Explaining the Moon
Illusion
by Lloyd Kaufman and
James H. Kaufman.

There are
other explanations,
too. It doesn't matter
which is correct, though,
if all you want to do is
see a big beautiful Moon.
The best time to look is
around moonrise, when the
Moon is peeking through
trees and houses or over
mountain ridges. The
table below (scroll down)
lists rise times for
selected US cities.
A fun activity: Look
at the Moon directly and
then through a narrow
opening of some kind. For
example, 'pinch' the moon
between your thumb and
forefinger or view it
through a cardboard tube,
which hides the
foreground terrain. Can
you make the optical
illusion vanish?
Stop that! You won't
want to miss the Moon
Illusion.
Author:
Dr. Tony Phillips
| Credit:
Science@NASA
Courtesy:
NASA
Go to
Know News Index
Back to top
Go to Virginia Greene
Go to
Greene Lite |