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Supermoon: Incredible images captured of the biggest moon of 2014

Sunday night’s moon was at its closest point to the Earth in 20 years

Loulla-Mae Eleftheriou-Smith
Monday 11 August 2014 10:16 EDT
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The largest supermoon of 2014 rising over Virginia, USA
The largest supermoon of 2014 rising over Virginia, USA (AFP)

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The phenomenon seen looming out of the sky on Sunday night was the biggest supermoon of 2014, appearing larger than anything seen in the sky for decades.

The reason for the moon’s appearance, and for the hype surrounding the second supermoon of the year, is because its orbit brought it the closest it has been to the Earth in 20 years.

This was due to two variables: firstly, this moon was known as a perigee moon, which occurs when the moon hits the point of its orbit closest to the Earth, which usually means being around 30,000 miles from the planet. Sunday night’s moon was about 863 miles closer.

Secondly, Sunday night’s moon became full within the same hour of being at the perigee point in its orbit, making it appear bigger and brighter than usual, too.

The Perseid meteor shower also occurred on Sunday night, but the brightness of the moon may have drowned it out for most viewers. Dr Bill Cooke from Nasa’s meteoroid environment office said the “lunar glare wipes out the black, velvety backdrop required to see faint meteors, and sharply reduces counts.”

But Google was quick to mark the arrival of the annual celestial display, running an animated Doodle on its homepage, showing meteors dashing through the sky against a variety of backdrops.

And for those that missed out on Sunday night’s phenomenon, the last supermoon can be seen on 9 September.

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