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Tonight's blue micromoon won't happen again until 2053. Here's how to see it
Astronomy is full of misnomers. The blue micromoon of May 30 will not be blue. Nor will it be particularly “micro” in size. It will, however, be the moon. Here’s what to know.
What is a blue moon?There are two types of so-called blue moon. The older definition refers to the third full moon in a season that has four (rather than the usual three) full moons.
The newer and more common use of the term refers to the second full moon in a month. It dates back to an error in a 1946 edition of Sky & Telescope magazine , a publication you’d think would know better.
What is a micromoon?Though the moon’s actual size never changes, its apparent size varies depending on where it is in its orbit when it’s fully illuminated.
A micromoon is at its apogee, or farthest point from Earth, about 407,000 kms away. A supermoon, in comparison, is at perigee, just 357,000 kms away. The difference between the two is about 14 per cent in size, and 30 per cent in brightness.
Is it blue?Not really. However, in 1883 the volcano Krakatoa erupted and spread ash high into the atmosphere, filtering the light of the moon and turning it a somewhat blue-green hue.
More recent, though smaller, volcanic eruptions such as the 1983 eruption of El Chichon in Mexico and the eruptions of Mt. St. Helens in 1980 and Mount Pinatubo in 1991 have caused similar effects.
How rare are blue moons?The phrase “once in a blue moon” refers to something very rare, but blue moons aren’t super-rare, averaging out to one every 33 months, or 41 times in a century.
That said, 2018 had a rare “double blue moon,” with a blue moon in January and another in March, plus no full moon in February — a so-called “black moon.” The next time that happens will be in 2037.
Seasonal blue moons are a little rarer, but they still happen every two to three years on average.
The next seasonal blue moon will be on May 20, 2027. The next twice-in-one-month blue moon will take place on New Year’s Eve, 2028. The next micro full moon is just a month away; June 29.
But the blue-micro combination won’t happen again until 2053.
How can I see it?This is the easy part. The full moon will rise shortly after sunset on the evening of May 30, and it will be up all night. All you need are clear skies. As an added bonus, the bright star Arcturus will be just to one side of the full moon. It’s red. Honest!






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