Skip to main contentSkip to main content
You have permission to edit this collection.
Edit
It's the summer of supermoons in 2023, here are the names of the full moons
editor's pick

It's the summer of supermoons in 2023, here are the names of the full moons

  • Updated
  • 0

The blue moon will be back in 2023 after a hiatus in 2022. That will go along with four consecutive supermoons, a lunar eclipse and a "super blue moon."

2023 will go through 13 full moons, a function of a roughly 29.5-day lunar cycle fitting into the 365 days it takes for the Earth to rotate around the Sun. That will bring a blue moon Aug. 30, the second full moon of a month. 

Four of the full moons will be a supermoon: July 3, Aug. 1, Aug. 30 and Sept. 29. During a supermoon, the moon is at its closest distance to the earth.

The moon's rotation around the Earth isn't a perfect circle, it's longer on one side than the other. Therefore, the moon is at varying distances to the Earth, depending on the time of year. 

During supermoons, the moon appears brighter and about 7% bigger than other full moons.

The one lunar eclipse, when the full moon drifts into the shadow of the Earth, will occur on Oct. 28.  

Most of the time, the "full" moon isn't actually 100% full. Only when the moon, Earth and the sun are exactly aligned is the moon technically 100% full and produces a lunar eclipse.  

Scroll down to see the names given to each full moon as well as the meaning behind each and more information about the lunar eclipse. 

The naming information comes from www.space.com

0 Comments

Related to this collection

Most Popular

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.

Topics

Breaking News

Daily Alerts