02 October 2015

Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

On September 27th, we experienced an event that does not happen very often, a supermoon lunar eclipse. We have had a supermoon before, and I've talked about it (see Supermoon). A supermoon is just the moon at perigee. However, this time, we had a supermoon occur when we had a lunar eclipse.

Lunar eclipses aren't all that rare (they happen once every six months), but to have one occur when the moon is at perigee is a sight to behold. The moon appears the largest and the lunar eclipse at this time is actually the shortest total lunar eclipse to occur. It is the shortest because the moon is at its closest, so it is actually moving at its fastest. Many lunar eclipses can last a few hours, but totality for this eclipse was only an hour and a half.

If you want to know more about lunar eclipses, see here.

Autumnal Equinox

This past September 23rd, the northern hemisphere experienced the beginning of our fall season.

In terms of astronomy, what does this mean?

In the sky, if we could see the ecliptic, the path the Sun travels on as it appears to cross the sky, the point of the autumnal equinox occurs when the Sun crosses the celestial equator as it travels south on the ecliptic. This marks the beginning of autumn for all of us in the northern hemisphere, and the beginning of the spring for those in the southern hemisphere.

Another way to look at it, is that the Sun is directly overhead at the equator, which means that the Earth itself is tilted in the plane perpendicular to the Sun. Neither the northern hemisphere or the southern hemisphere is tilted towards the Sun. But at this point, the southern hemisphere will begin to receive more sunlight as the southern hemisphere is beginning to be tilted more towards the Sun.