Posted on 11/28/2017 5:51:44 PM PST by BenLurkin
Loft your eyes toward the skies on Sunday, Dec 3. The only supermoon of 2017 will be appearing over your head.
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The moon's orbit varies a lot. On average, our natural satellite is 238,000 miles from here. But it can be as far as about 252,000 miles away and as close as 221,000 miles or so. When the moon is full at that short distance, the resulting supermoon can appear about 14 percent larger in the sky, and can be about 30 percent brighter.
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This weekend's event won't be quite as spectacular as the much-ballyhooed supermoon of November 2016, which was the largest since 1
(Excerpt) Read more at popularmechanics.com ...
252/221 ~= 1.14027 ... “squared” ~= 1.30022
... Check!
know someone who has a birthday that day.
Mark
Toobad the waethwr is caca in Seattle area right now....otherwise I would slap my camera in the equatorial mount and get some pix.
Got some fantastic photos of the eclipse in August.
The last “supermoon” I saw was in 1964 when one of the T. brothers mooned us from their brand new Pontiac GTO convertible while going over a raised railroad track.
We were all singing “How high the Moon” that night, and howling at it, too.
What has been seen cannot be undone!
They don’t make songs like that any more.
That is pretty cool.
Gross
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