SUPER MOON. Monday, July 3 will see the first Super Moon of 2023, also known as the Super Deer Moon. What time to observe it? How far from Earth? What effects? We tell you everything.
[Updated June 29, 2023 6:48 AM] The first Super Moon of the year, a “Super Deer Moon”, a term borrowed from both astrology and Native Americans, is observable on the night of Monday, July 3 . In the night sky, the full moon will appear 5.8% larger and 12.8% brighter than normal during the “perigee-syzygy” phenomenon, when the full moon is at the furthest point of its orbit. close to Earth.
What does a Super Moon look like? How to explain the phenomenon and what is the origin of its name? What are the effects of the Super Moon? What is the schedule for the Super Moons in 2023? All the answers to your questions below.
The next Super Moon falls on Monday, July 3, 2023. The Moon will be “Super” exactly at 1:39 p.m., located at a distance of 361,934 kilometers from our Earth. While waiting to observe the Super Moon on July 3, discover the most beautiful photos of Super Moons taken around the world, from the United States to Australia via Europe, in 2022:
In astronomy, this event is called “perigee-syzygia”, the name of Super Moon having nothing scientific, since it is an invention of the astrologer Richard Nolle in 1979. “A Super moon occurs when the full moon coincides with the point when the Moon comes closest to Earth in its elliptical orbit, a point called perigee,” explains NASA’s website.
By Super Moon, we therefore mean a celestial phenomenon that is due to two elements: the only satellite of planet Earth passes closest to us when it is a full moon evening.
A Super Moon appears slightly brighter and larger than a Full Moon, simply because it appears at perigee, at its closest orbit point to Earth, less than 360,000 km away.
Due to the Full Moon’s proximity to our planet Earth, its effects have an even stronger impact on tides, mood, and sleep. Indeed, as explained in a 2013 Swiss scientific study published in the journal Current Biology, “a lunar rhythm can modulate sleep patterns in humans.” This means that the time to fall asleep is extended by 5 minutes, deep sleep decreased by 30% and sleep duration by 20 minutes. Consequently, the level of melatonin, a hormone secreted during our sleep, which has a role to play in mood, is lower, which can cause irritability or even depression.
If lunar eclipses can occur several times a year, the conjunction of the two phenomena (Super Moon and total eclipse) is rare and gives rise to what is called a blood moon. Several centuries ago, “blood moons” were perceived as the announcement of great catastrophes. Today, we know that this color is due to the projection of sunlight. During the lunar eclipse, it is possible to “see the reflections on the lunar surface of all sunrises and sunsets on Earth”, a phenomenon which results from “a rare alignment of these three astronomical cycles”, a Professor Jason Aufdenberg of Embry-Riddle Aeronautics University in Florida pointed out to Point.
If a supermoon is announced as a blue supermoon, it has nothing to do with its color. It is so called because it is the second full moon of a calendar month. Something that only happens every 19 years. The last Super Blue Moon was on January 31, 2018. The conjunction of phenomena, Super Blue Moon and Super Blood Moon, had not occurred since March 31, 1866 and the next one will not occur until January 31 2037. The use of the term “blue” would result from a blunder in an article in the American amateur astronomy magazine Sky and Telescope, in 1946. The article in question was entitled “Once in a Blue Moon” and had been written by journalist James Hugh Pruett who misinterpreted the Maine Farmers’ Almanac of 1937. And so that confusing phrase went around the world in no time…! Every two to three years, the year includes 13 full moons instead of 12. The super blue moon is therefore associated with the number 13. Beliefs from the Middle Ages associate these years with 13 full moons with natural disasters, but gardeners rather evoke particularly rainy years not conducive to harvests.
The expression “Super Moon of the century” is to be taken with a grain of salt. The last time our satellite approached so close to the earth was in 1948. On November 14, 2016, the Moon had never been so big since 1948. NASA, who spoke of “super extra Moon”, announced one of the “most impressive lunar appearances of the century”. But if you were expecting to see a gigantic Moon, you may have been disappointed. “This full moon [was] indeed the closest to the Earth for the year 2016 […], but its variation in apparent diameter [was] absolutely not obvious to perceive with the naked eye”, explained then the scientific author Guillaume Cannat in his blog Autour du ciel. The notion of “Super Moon” was invented by an astrologer some forty years ago, and clumsily used by the NASA press service”, he continued. Although the phenomenon is quite exceptional, Guillaume Cannat then warned us about the “exceptional” nature of his observation.