Last night’s
full moon was easy to miss, and that was rather the point. While supermoons
dominate headlines with their oversized glow, May 30th delivered the opposite:
a blue micromoon, the farthest, smallest, and dimmest full moon of
the year. NASA featured it as their Astronomy Picture of the Day, showcasing a
striking side-by-side comparison photographed from Kolkata, India, one full
moon enormous and blazing, the other noticeably smaller and dimmer. Same Moon.
Same photographer. Wildly different appearance.
The reason behind that difference is one of the most elegant demonstrations
of orbital mechanics visible to the naked eye. And the combination of phenomena
that produced last night’s event won’t repeat for nearly three decades.
What Is a Micromoon?
Because the moon does not travel in a perfect circle, its distance from
Earth changes slightly throughout each orbit. A micromoon occurs when a full
moon coincides with apogee, the point at which the moon is farthest from Earth.
This elliptical orbit is not an accident or anomaly. Johannes Kepler proved
in the 17th century with his laws of planetary motion that the Moon’s path
around Earth is an ellipse. The consequence is that the Moon swings between a
closest point (perigee, roughly 363,300 km away) and a farthest point (apogee,
roughly 405,500 km away) every month. As the Moon moves closer to Earth,
gravitational potential energy decreases while kinetic energy increases. The
opposite occurs as it moves toward apogee. The total energy of the orbit
remains constant.
Last night’s moon was approximately 252,360 miles (406,134 km) away from
Earth, compared to the average lunar distance of around 238,900 miles (384,472
km). That extra distance made it appear roughly 10–14% smaller and slightly
dimmer than a supermoon, a difference most casual observers wouldn’t have
noticed without a reference, but one that photographs make unmistakable.
What Made It a Blue Moon?
The “blue” part had nothing to do with colour. A blue moon simply means it
is the second full moon in the same calendar month. The first full moon of May
rose on the 1st; this one closed out the month on the 30th. The Moon’s orbital
period is about 29.5 days, just short of most calendar months, which means
occasionally two full moons fit inside a single month, roughly every two to
three years.
Neither blue moons nor micromoons are especially rare on their own. What is
rare is their coincidence. Although the next micromoon occurs next month, and
the next blue moon at the end of 2028, the next blue micromoon will not occur
until 2053. Some estimates for observers outside North America push that date
even further, to at least December 31, 2066.
If you stepped outside last night and thought the Moon looked like any
other full moon, you weren’t wrong, but you were also watching something that
won’t happen again in quite this way for a generation.
Why Does This Matter? The Science Behind the Spectacle
Beyond the visual drama, the Moon’s elliptical orbit has real, measurable
effects on Earth, and understanding them matters more than most people realise.
Tides. The most
immediate consequence of the Moon’s varying distance is gravitational. Once a
month at perigee, when the moon is closest to Earth, tide-generating forces are
higher than usual, producing above-average tidal ranges. About two weeks later
at apogee, the lunar tide-raising force is smaller and tidal ranges are less
than average. With last night’s Moon at its most distant, tides were
correspondingly subdued. These variations can affect marine life, fishing
industries, and coastal erosion over time.
Orbital
mechanics in plain sight. What makes supermoon and micromoon comparisons
genuinely valuable is that they turn abstract physics into something anyone can
see. Kepler’s second law, that an orbiting body sweeps out equal areas in equal
times, means the Moon actually moves faster when
close to Earth and slower when far away. Last night’s
micromoon was the Moon at its most leisurely, ambling through the far arc of
its ellipse.
Calibrating
our intuitions about the sky. Humans are notoriously poor judges of the Moon’s
size. The famous “Moon illusion” makes it appear enormous near the horizon
regardless of its actual distance. A micromoon may even seem bigger when
rising, due to this optical trick, despite being the smallest-looking moon of
the year. Knowing the physics helps us understand why our perception deceives
us, which is itself a lesson worth having.
What It Was
Not
It’s worth
being clear about what a micromoon does not do.
Despite persistent claims around supermoons and micromoons alike, there is no
scientific evidence linking them to earthquakes, floods, or other natural
disasters. The gravitational variation is real but modest, not the stuff of
catastrophe, just the quiet, reliable mechanics of an orbit.
The universe doesn’t need special effects to be worth understanding.
Sometimes it just needs geometry, and last night, geometry put on quite a show.
Image
Credit: Soumyadeep Mukherjee
See the original APOD entry at https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap260530.html
Source: The Smallest Full Moon of 2026 Just Happened, Here’s the Science Behind It – Scents of Science


