Out with those telescopes, all! Away from your computer, astronomy happens. This from New Scientist:
The full Moon will loom larger in the sky on Friday than it has since 1993, as it will be nearly as close as it ever comes to Earth in its orbit.
And brighter, too. And there's a meteor shower in the backdrop. If there ever was a time for skywatching...
I know it's not politics, but this doesn't happen all that often, so why miss it?
The Moon does not orbit Earth in a perfect circle. Instead, it follows an elliptical path that brings it 50,000 kilometres closer to our planet on one side of its orbit (called perigee) than the other (apogee).
On 12 December, the Moon will enter its full phase, when its disc appears completely illuminated by the Sun, just four hours after reaching its closest point to Earth. This will make it 14% bigger and 30% brighter than other full Moons in 2008, though the difference will be hard to distinguish by eye (see the difference in the full Moon's size in 2004).
It will be eight years before the Moon appears so big again. "This evening's Moon is not only the largest for 2008 but also during the period 1993-2016," says Anthony Ayiomamitis, who lives in Greece.
For observers in the northern hemisphere, tonight's full Moon will also appear higher in the sky than any other this year. Around midnight, it will shine down from nearly overhead.
You can also view some pix here or a sort of techie pic at my blog here.
And this article also mentions another surprise:
As a backdrop, the Geminid meteor shower will also be visible tonight. Up to 100 meteors an hour are expected to appear.
If there ever was a good night for skywatching, this is it!