RE: Super Bright Full Moon December 22

Krumpe, Andrew (AKrumpe@dgo.com)
Wed, 15 Dec 1999 08:33:14 -0500


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West Wight Potter Website at URL
http://www.lesbois.com/wwpotter/
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Hmmmmm..... If the north pole tilts towards the sun why does it experience 6
months of darkness in the winter? In the summer, just the opposite occurs -
that's why call the northern European regions, "The Land of the Midnight
Sun."

Andy Krumpe
P19 Great Wight
Seacoast of New Hampshire
Air Temp: 34 deg. F.
Water Temp: 41 deg. F
Forecast: Light rain, snow, sleet ending, becoming partly sunny

-----Original Message-----
From: happy life skills foundation [SMTP:hapilife@efn.org]
Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 1999 4:49 PM
To: Krumpe, Andrew
Cc: 'hlg@pacbell.net'; wwpotter@tscnet.com
Subject: RE: Super Bright Full Moon December 22

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West Wight Potter Website at URL
http://www.lesbois.com/wwpotter/
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no...wrong about tilt. At winter solstice the north pole tilts
toward the
sun....the angle of reflection is less...hence winter
Ken Silverman

On Tue, 14 Dec 1999, Krumpe, Andrew wrote:

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> West Wight Potter Website at URL
> http://www.lesbois.com/wwpotter/
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> I think everyone is looking forward to witnessing this full moon,
and I
> agree that it ought to be brighter than normal. However, I don't
think that
> it coinciding with the solstice has any effect on its brightness.
It is true
> that the earth is closer to the sun in the winter than in the
summer, but
> its perigee doesn't necessarily occur on the solstice. The
increased
> brightness due to our earth-moon system being closer to the sun
will be
> apparent for about 2 or 3 months during the winter.
>
> You're right also about the moon's perigee with the earth. All
this will
> produce a larger, brighter moon. I just wanted to clarify that the
solstice
> will have nothing to do with it as it is just the moment when the
north pole
> of the earth's axis tilts furthest away from the sun.
>
> Andy Krumpe
> P19 "Great Wight"
> Seacoast of New Hampshire
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: hlg@pacbell.net [SMTP:hlg@pacbell.net]
> Sent: Friday, December 10, 1999 11:57 AM
> To: wwpotter@tscnet.com
> Subject: Super Bright Full Moon December 22
>
> On Dec. 22, 1999, watch for a super bright full moon!
> This year will be the first full moon to occur on the winter
> solstice, Dec. 22, commonly called the first day of winter. Since
a full
> moon on the winter solstice occurred in conjunction with a lunar
perigee
> (point in the moon's orbit that is closest to Earth).
> The moon will appear about 14% larger than it does at apogee
(the
> point in it's elliptical orbit that is farthest from the Earth)
since the
> Earth is also several million miles closer to the sun at this time
of the
> year than in the summer, sunlight striking the moon is about 7%
stronger
> making it brighter. Also, this will be the closest perigee of the
Moon of
> the year since the moon's orbit is constantly deforming.
>
> If the weather is clear and there is a snow cover where you
live, it
> is
> believed that even car headlights will be superfluous. On
December
> 21st,
> 1866 the Lakota Sioux took advantage of this combination of
> occurrences
> and staged a devastating retaliatory ambush on soldiers in
the
> Wyoming
> Territory.
>
> In laymen's terms it will be a super bright full moon, much
more
> than the usual AND it hasn't happened this way for 133 years!
> Our ancestors 133 years ago saw this. Our descendants 100 or
so
> years from now will see this again.
>
>