Friday 31 July 2015

Once In A Blue Moon: Rare Sight In Sky Tonight

Britain is due to experience its first blue moon in three years as a full moon hangs in the sky for the second time in a month.
The term refers to a quirk of the calendar rather than the colour of the celestial body - although the moon has been known to appear blue during certain atmospheric conditions.
The "blue moon" name is used when an extra full moon appears within a specific time period, like a month or season.
The last full moon in Britain occurred on 2 July.
The next occurs today, with moon rise expected to take place at 8.47pm in Durham, the nearest city to the geographical centre of mainland UK.
Its highest point will occur at 12.43am, according to timeanddate.com, and then it will set at 6.43am.
Conditions for seeing it, according to forecasters, are likely to be best in southern and central England, northern Scotland and northern Ireland, where scattered clouds and clear skies are predicted.
The best place in the world to see the moon at its fullest could be northern Australia where the moon will reach nearly 100% at 8.43pm local time (11.43am UK time) and where skies are expected to be completely clear.
Although the blue moon has no major significance to astronomers, it is considered highly important by astrologers who regard it as an omen of upset, change and possibility.
Some claim it signals a time to give in to the heart's desires.
The last one occurred on 31 August 2012, and the next will be seen in another three years on 31 January 2018.
Its significance was captured in the famous song Blue Moon by the Tin Pan Alley songwriters Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart in 1934.
It was first performed by Connee Boswell as the theme music to a radio programme, but was later covered by Elvis Presley and Ella Fitzgerald among others, and the Marcels, whose 1961 version went to number one in the UK and US.
The moon is known to turn a distinctly blue colour when smoke or dust particles hang in the air, usually caused by wildfires or a volcano eruption.
In 1883, the moon turned blue for weeks after the volcano Krakatoa exploded with the force of a nuclear bomb between Sumatra and Java.

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