Community Corner

Tuesday: Once in a Blue Moon

Step outside Tuesday night to see a once-an-every-now-and-then astronomical event.

By Brandie Jefferson

The rise of Tuesday’s full moon will bring up something special: A Blue Moon.

Before you start turning pages in your favorite astronomy reference book –  let’s clear this up.  It’s true; the most common usage for Blue Moon (besides referring to that song in that movie with John Travolta) refers to the second full moon in a single month.

And although Tuesday’s full moon will be just the first full moon in August (typically, when a Blue Moon occurs, there are two full moons per month), there are several other meanings for the term, according to Space.com. 

A less common usage dates back to at least 1937 according to Space.com, in which a Blue Moon is the third of four full moons each season (where a season is the time from the equinox to the solstice, or from the solstice to the equinox).

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Tuesday’s Blue Moon, then, is what’s known as a seasonal blue moon: The third this season (that’s summer, if Monday’s fall-like temperatures have you confused).

The rarest Blue Moon is a phenomenon in which the  moon actually looks … wait for it … Yes, blue. This is caused by particles in the air—often ash and dust caused by a volcano or, as in this instance described on Spaceweather.com, a major forest fire.

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It was a cloudy day. Early in the afternoon, the sun disappeared and it became as dark as midnight. Lamps were lit and lanterns brought out. I went outside to walk around and check the livestock, and found that the chickens had all gone to roost, all the wild birds had gone to sleep, and the farm animals had gone into their normal nightime sleeping places in barns and coops. We could see that the streetlights had come on in the nearby town. We had no Television at the time, but heard over the radio that there was a forest fire in Canada producing so much smoke that it had blacked out the sun …

… As the day waned, the smoke thinned a bit and the sun could be seen through the blackness as a faint blue orb, but it never did get light outside. After nightfall the moon which was full that night, was blue. I read later that blue moons were seen as far away as Europe on Sept. 26, 1950. (Read this and other Blue Moon stories at Spaceweather.com).

Don’t expect anything nearly as poetic to occur Tuesday night, but the National Weather Service is forecasting clear skies for the area.  Why not step outside at about 1:12 a.m. (early Wednesday morning) and look up anyway? No matter what color, a full moon is always a magnificent sight. 


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