Photographer BG Boyd captured the supermoon at its largest while rising Monday morning (Nov. 14) over Tucson, Arizona.
This month’s full moon came the closest to Earth that it has been since 1948. Skywatchers and astrophotographers flocked to see the big, bright moon in all of its glory Sunday night (Nov. 13).
The full supermoon peaked this morning (Nov. 14) at 8:52 a.m. EST (1352 GMT), but it will still look “super” for about a day after its maximum. So if you haven’t seen it yet, there’s still some time to go check it out. [Supermoon November 2016: When, Where & How to See It]
But just in case you aren’t able to see the supermoon, Space.com has you covered. You can still watch last night’s live webcast of the supermoon to see videos of the enlarged moon and hear the experts discuss what makes it so super. Or check out some of our reader-submitted photos below and in our supermoon photo gallery.
Photographer Chris Cook took a self-portrait with what he called the “super duper full moon” on Sunday (Nov. 13).
Credit: Chris Cook www.cookphoto.com
Photographer Chris Cook took a self-portrait with what he called the “super-duper full moon” in the background on Sunday evening in Eastham, Massachusetts. Cook said that as the moon was rising, “it didn’t look any bigger than other moonrises, but once it got higher in the sky later that night it did seem larger than a full moon at apogee,” or the point in the moon’s orbit at which it is farthest from Earth.
This image by Bill Hood compares the size of the supermoon with the other full moons from 2016. Hood shot the moon photos with a Nikon D750 camera and Nikon 200-500mm lens.
Credit: Bill Hood
The difference in size between the supermoon and other full moons can be difficult to see — it only appears about 14 percent larger than usual. To offer some comparison with other full moons, photographer Bill Hood created the composite image that’s shown above.
In some other photos, the supermoon did appear much larger than an ordinary full moon. With other objects serving as points of reference in a supermoon shot, the moon can look huge! [How to Photograph the Supermoon: NASA Pro Shares His Tips]
Photographer Stan Honda caught this photo of a West Jet airplane flying in front of the supermoon after taking off from LaGuardia Airport in New York on Nov. 13.
Credit: Stan Honda
Photographer Stan Honda captured this photo of a WestJet airliner flying across the face of the supermoon after it took off from LaGuardia Airport in New York on Nov. 13. Honda took the photo from Central Park in Manhattan at 4:50 p.m. EST, while he was taking pictures of the moon along with members of the Amateur Astronomers Association of New York and students from his night-sky photography class.
Honda said that he had not intended to take photos of airplanes when he set out to photograph the supermoon; timing was simply on his side. “The moon had just cleared the top of the building when I saw a plane flying towards the moon,” he said. “I waited until the plane was just entering the disk and tripped the shutter.”
Photographers waiting for a chance to get out and photograph another big and bright full moon need not wait long. December’s full moon will also be “super” — albeit less super than November’s full moon. [3 ‘Supermoons’ In Last 3 Months of 2016 – NASA Explains | Video]
Editor’s note: If you have an amazing skywatching photo you’d like to share with Space.com and our news partners for a possible story or image gallery, please send your photos to our staff at spacephotos@space.com.
Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her @hannekescience. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.
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