Hi everyone and welcome new members from the Mojave National Preserve star party last weekend! We are already setting up the spring date which we'll announce once its finalized. There were over 50 tents, over 120 attendees, a couple dozen attendees were urban youth, visiting MNP and camping out for probably the first time looking through about 10 telescopes! Article and photos http://www.mojavepreserve.org/news/2016/11/7/promoting-the-preserve
We were expecting a lot of questions about the "Supermoon" at the
telescopes tonight, but it's super cloudy, so we are cancelling
our sidewalk astronomy -- we usually hold it near the first
quarter moon Saturday night, but we did Mojave non that night this
month since the campground was available. Both Sunday and Monday
night will be about equally good to measure the "full " or what we
astronomers call a "perigee" moon, so look in binos
In a nutshell a supermoon new or full moon which occurs with the Moon at or near (within 90% of) its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit. Dubbed so by an astrologer in 2011. Because the Moon's orbit is an ellipse instead of a circle, its distance from Earth varies during the month from about 225,800 miles (363,400 km) at perigee, or closest approach, to 252,000 miles (405,550 km) at apogee or furthest distance in the elliptical orbit. Changing the distance causes the Moon's size and brightness to change as well. A perigee moon is on average 7% bigger and 16% brighter than an average full Moon, but during an unusually close perigee (the supermoon moon), the full Moon can be 12–14% larger than a full Moon at apogee (farthest) and 30% brighter. There are nice graphics and explanations here --> http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/see-the-biggest-supermoon-in-68-years/
If it is clear tomorrow, the full moon rises at 4:38 p.m. here in California. The moon turns precisely full on November 14, 2016 at 1352 UTC. meaning the moon will reach the crest of its full phase on November 14 at 1352 UTC. That translates to 9:52 a.m. AST, 8:52 a.m. EST, 7:52 a.m. CST, 6:52 a.m. MST, 5:52 a.m. PST. The moon will reach perigee – the moon’s closest point to Earth for this month – within an one and one-half hours of that time. This EarthSky article gives a lot of other great information and graphics! http://earthsky.org/?p=190918Jane Houston Jones @jhjones What's Up November 2016: Venus, Jupiter and Saturn + more meteor showers https://youtu.be/aj7hDvy9bgI