Houston Chronicle Sunday

Supermoon returns; blue moon coming

Lunar light at its brightest, orb will appear larger

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This weekend will be a good time to relax, look up at the sky and take in the glowing moon.

On Sunday, the moon will shine brighter and appear larger than it has all year. The Dec. 3 Full Cold Moon will be 2017’s only “supermoon.”

That’s when the moon is full and illuminate­d at the same time it comes closest to the Earth during its orbit.

“Normally, the full moon doesn’t coincide with when the moon is closest to the Earth,” said St. Petersburg College professor and astronomer Craig Joseph. “And we’re about to get three of these in a row.”

After 11 months without a supermoon — that’s actually just a popular nickname, not an astronomic­al term — the moon will light up the sky Sunday and again on Jan. 2 and 31. When the moon reaches perigee (that’s the scientific term) twice in the same month, it’s a called a “blue moon.” (No, it doesn’t change color, it’s just infrequent, hence the saying “once in a blue moon.”)

But the astronomer warned that as use of the nickname “supermoon” grows, so do expectatio­ns.

“Just be careful,” he said. “It gets a bit overblown.”

The moon will appear about 16 percent brighter and 7 percent larger than normal, according to astronomer­s. Some people, Joseph said, might not notice anything or just assume it’s like any other full moon.

The best time to see the moon at its most stunning will be in the early evening as the moon rises and as it sets in the early morning.

 ?? Kansas City Star / TNS ?? 2017’s only supermoon will begin around 7 p.m. Sunday.
Kansas City Star / TNS 2017’s only supermoon will begin around 7 p.m. Sunday.

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