Skywatchers, cast your gaze heavenward tonight for the first spring full moon, also known as the Harvest Moon. You might want to set your alarm for this one.
But first, here’s why tonight’s full moon is special.
The full Harvest Moon is known by other names – Fruit Moon, Barley, Corn, Reunion Festival, Chuseok Festival, Imo Meigetsu, etc, as determined by traditions from around the world.
Gordon Johnston, Nasa’s Programme Executive in the Science Mission Directorate at the space agency’s headquarters in Washington, said ‘Harvest Moon’ is an old European name.
“The Oxford English Dictionary gives 1706 as the year of its first published use. Farmers sometimes need to work late by the light of the Moon for the harvest,” Johnston explains.
“Newer names for this full Moon are the GRAIL Moon and the LADEE Moon, named for two lunar robotic missions launched in September”, Johnston says.
The best time to view a full moon is a few days after the first quarter, when exactly half the moon is illuminated.
The Harvest Moon is exactly 180 degrees opposite the Sun in ecliptic longitude on 21 September 2021, at 7:55 EDT (or 1:55am South African Standard Time).
However, the moon will appear “full” for around three days, with the fullest point occurring at 7:55 am Eastern Daylight Time.
Nasa says: “While the Moon will be full on Monday from Iceland, Liberia, and Senegal westward across the Americas, it will be on Tuesday for the rest of Africa and Europe eastward across Asia and Australia.”
To view it from South Africa, cast your eyes skywards any time after dark tonight. You should be able to enjoy the astronomical event until Thursday morning.
You’ll only have to wait another month. The next full moon will appear on 20 October. It is known as Hunters Moon, or Blood Moon, as it traditionally marked the start of the hunting season.
The Hunter’s Micromoon in October 2020 was accompanied by a lunar apogee, which occurs when the moon is the farthest point from Earth in its elliptical orbit.
Old folklore accounts suggested that micro moons affect human mental health and bring on natural disasters, such as earthquakes. However, no scientific evidence supports any such correlation.
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