I know Guy, it was just a little early for my brain for such formulas!padfield wrote:Sorry Lee - I was only trying to be helpful!
Cheers
Lee
I know Guy, it was just a little early for my brain for such formulas!padfield wrote:Sorry Lee - I was only trying to be helpful!
Should make for quite a sight and good for photography if conditions are right.On 19 March, the full moon will appear unusually large in the night sky as it reaches a point in its cycle known as 'lunar perigee'.
Stargazers will be treated to a spectacular view when the moon approaches Earth at a distance of 221,567 miles in its elliptical orbit - the closest it will have passed to our planet since 1992.
The full moon could appear up to 14% bigger and 30% brighter in the sky, especially when it rises on the eastern horizon at sunset or is provided with the right atmospheric conditions.