Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




MOON DAILY
A "Blue Moon" Heralds the Harvest
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Aug 30, 2012


When the Moon is full, it is opposite the Sun in the sky. Thus it rises at sunset and sets at sunrise. Its craters, mountains, and other surface features appear muted because the high Sun casts no shadows as seen from our earthbound perspective. S and T: Gary Seronik.

Heralding the change in season, a full Moon will rise in the eastern twilight sky on August 31st for the second time this month (the first time came on August 1st). Many people use the expression "once in a blue Moon" to mean something that occurs rarely, and you might be tempted to call August 31st's big, bright orb a "Blue Moon" too.

While the former meaning can be traced back centuries, the latter definition is much newer - and it's wrong! At least if you're a stickler about these things.

"In modern usage, the second full Moon in a month has come to be called a 'Blue Moon.' But it's not!" says Kelly Beatty, Senior Contributing Editor for Sky and Telescope magazine.

"This colorful term is actually a calendrical goof that worked its way into the pages of Sky and Telescope back in March 1946, and it spread to the world from there."

Sky and Telescope admitted to its "Blue Moon blooper" in its May 1999 issue. Canadian folklorist Philip Hiscock and Texas astronomer Donald W. Olson had helped the magazine's editors figure out how the mistake was made, and how the two-full-Moons-in-a-month meaning spread into the English language.

Before 1946, a Blue Moon always meant something else. For example, says Hiscock, sometimes it referred to an obvious absurdity. Quite a few old songs use it as a symbol of sadness and loneliness.

There's even a cocktail called a Blue Moon; it's a mix of curacao, gin, and perhaps a twist of lemon. And, exceedingly rarely, the Moon actually does turn blue in our sky - when a volcanic eruption, forest fires or dust storms send lots of fine dust into the atmosphere.

Our 1946 writer, amateur astronomer James Hugh Pruett (1886-1955), made an incorrect assumption about how the term had been used in the Maine Farmers' Almanac - which consistently used "Blue Moon" to mean the third full Moon in a season containing four of them (rather than the usual three).

By this definition, there is no Blue Moon in August 2012; instead, the last one was in November 2010, and the next happens in August 2013.

But there's no turning back now. The concept of a Blue Moon as the second full Moon in a month with two, as well as the third full Moon in a season with four, are now both listed as official definitions in the 4th edition of the American Heritage Dictionary (Houghton Mifflin, 2000).

By either definition, Blue Moons happen about once every 2.7 years on average. The last occurrence of two full Moons in a calendar month was on New Years' Eve in 2009. After August 31st, it won't happen again until July 2015.

If you want to tell your readers, listeners, or viewers that this Thursday's full Moon is a Blue Moon, go right ahead. Pretty much everyone else will too. The newer, "wrong" definition is simpler and handier for most people to grasp and use.

"That's how the English language shifts. You can't beat back the tide," quips Sky and Telescope Senior Editor Alan MacRobert. "Not when the Moon is pulling the tide."

.


Related Links
Sky and Telescope Magazine
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








MOON DAILY
Signing out: Armstrong autographs under hammer
Los Angeles (AFP) Aug 28, 2012
A series of autographs of Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, will go under the hammer this week with auctioneers wondering if the sky's the limit for the prized signatures. Interest is likely to be intense, following Armstrong's death last weekend at age 82, according to the Los Angeles auction house behind the sale. "Neil Armstrong was very generous to those who sought o ... read more


MOON DAILY
US looks at new early-warning radar for Japan: officials

Lockheed Martin Receives Contract To Produce THAAD Weapon System Equipment For The US Army

Israel wraps up national SMS missile alert test

Komorowski says Poland should have own missile shield

MOON DAILY
US-China missile race

India halts Barak I missile purchase

S-400s to protect APEC summit

Raytheon, US Navy begin JSOW C-1 integrated testing

MOON DAILY
Drones, UAV: what is better?

Embraer awarded 1st phase of $6B cordon

Two Qaeda suspects killed in Yemen drone attack

Next generation of military aircraft will be unmanned

MOON DAILY
Lockheed Martin Wins Role on Defense Information Systems Agency Program

Raytheon unveils cross domain strategy to securely access information via mobile devices

NATO Special Forces Taps Mutualink for Global Cross Coalition Communications

Northrop Grumman Demonstrates Integrated Receiver Circuit Under DARPA Program

MOON DAILY
Study Explores Injury Risk in Military Humvee Crashes

New era in camouflage makeup: Shielding soldiers from searing heat of bomb blasts

Uganda investigates helicopter crashes

Canada mulls new army mobile surveillance

MOON DAILY
U.S. arms sales hit record $66 billion

Turkey seeks increased arms exports

US arms sales nearly triple in 2011, researchers say

Russia asks US to extradite arms smuggler Bout

MOON DAILY
US pushes for a new phase of arms race

China says US defence chief to visit in September

Outside View: How much is enough -- Part 2

Japan unveils video of clash with pro-China activists

MOON DAILY
Breakthrough in nanotechnology material science

Nano machine shop shapes nanowires, ultrathin films

New wave of technologies possible after ground-breaking analysis tool developed

Researchers develop method to grow artificial tissues with embedded nanoscale sensors




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement