• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

PSA: brightest moon of the year tonight

Status
Not open for further replies.
That explains the light I saw outside last night behind the porch. The snow was actually bright and it was midnight, and it's normally dark as there are no lights near there. I'll have to check it out further tonight.
 
Originally posted by: Cattlegod
Wasn't it the brightest in 15 years just a few weeks ago or something?

I'm not sure how astronomy works, but normally when they say "years" it's not really that.

How many eclipses did we get in past 5 years? like 5? Everytime it happens they say that this only happens every 394 trillion years or something like that. 😛
 
Originally posted by: Cattlegod
Wasn't it the brightest in 15 years just a few weeks ago or something?

This.

Although there isn't any thing technically stopping both statements being correct, as a couple of weeks ago it was a different year, and it is now the brightest moon of this year 😉
 
Originally posted by: PlasmaBomb
Originally posted by: Cattlegod
Wasn't it the brightest in 15 years just a few weeks ago or something?

This.

Although there isn't any thing technically stopping both statements being correct, as a couple of weeks ago it was a different year, and it is now the brightest moon of this year 😉

thats not what he said though.
 
Wouldn't the moon technically reach perigee every month? So what produces the appearance of it being any larger or brighter than other times the moon reaches perigee? An orbiting body should reach perigee every single orbital period, which the moon orbits approx every 29 days. So.. ? What gives.

Oh hah just figured it out.
Due to our movement through space, the perigee stays in the same spot, but where the moon must be in its orbit to produce a full moon is constantly changing since the position of Earth is always changing in relation to the moon.
So, say the moon reaches perigee at 4 o'clock on a virtual plane that'll be used for this description. Well, for one orbital period, a visible full moon on Earth will be when the moon reaches 8 o'clock on the plane for that day or two. As the Earth moves through space, the moon will always maintain a perigee at the 4 o'clock position on this plane surrounding Earth. As the Earth orbits the sun, this remains stationary in relation to the Earth but not the Sun, so at some points in Earth's orbital period, the perigee may approach the position required for a full moon, or even end up being directly in line for a lunar eclipse. But at other points, that perigee might just end up being in the position where the moon would create a solar eclipse. That'd be interesting.
So, due to the mechanics of our daily rotation, and our orbital period and that of the moon's orbital period, this doesn't happen all that often I'm assuming. Most likely it comes close to happening every year, but adding in the fact that Earth has a elliptical orbit as well, this wouldn't be as regular of an occurrence, as opposed to if the Earth had a perfect circle, it'd likely happen every year at the same day.
If... I'm visualizing this in my head correctly that is. Multiple stacked orbits can create a messy image in a head, no wonder it took astronomers so long in our history to finally get it correct. 🙂
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top