Full Pink Supermoon: How To See It In Agoura Hills

AGOURA HILLS, CA — If the weather cooperates in Agoura Hills, the third supermoon of the year is worth getting out of your house to view Tuesday night. The April full moon, also known as the “full pink moon,” is the largest of four consecutive supermoons.

This cosmic distraction from the serious threat of the new coronavirus, however brief, is a great chance to get outside, while practicing social distancing and wearing a do-it-yourself face mask — the latest a recommendation from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to control the spread of the virus.

The forecast for Agoura Hills Tuesday night is mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms, so chances of seeing the supermoon may be spotty.

The supermoon will shine brightly all night long, climbing to its highest point around 10:35 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time Tuesday. But the best times to get out and enjoy it are when it comes up and when it sets. In Agoura Hills, moonrise is at 7:10 p.m. Tuesday and moonset is at 7:11 a.m. Wednesday.

Supermoons are an illusion. They aren’t any larger than any other full moon, but the trick of the eye makes you see them as inflated orbs that are brighter and bigger than normal full moons. Supermoons occur when our natural satellite reaches its closest point to Earth in its orbit (called perigee). When that happens, the moon appears about 30 percent brighter and 15 percent larger than when the moon is at its farthest point from our planet (called apogee).

And despite its moniker, the April full pink supermoon is not a rosy orb. It’ll take on its typical golden hue as it rises, then turn bright white as it climbs higher in the sky.

It’s called a pink moon because the April full moon closely corresponds to the emergence of the bright pink phlox flowers. The April full moon may also be called the sprouting grass moon, the egg moon and the fish moon.

The first to occur after the spring equinox, the April full moon is also called the Paschal full moon because it determines the date of Easter, the “movable feast” that falls on a different date each year. Easter always follows the first Sunday after the Paschal full moon.

You’ll likely see some websites that say the April full moon is the second supermoon of the year. Astronomers and astrologists disagreed on whether the February full moon was a supermoon. Space.com settles the dispute by calling it “kind of a supermoon.”

Though the February full moon’s supermoon status was questioned, astronomers and astrologists agree the March, April and May full moons qualify for the designation.

Of all of the supermoons, this is the one to see. It will be closer to Earth than the one in March and the upcoming supermoon on May 7.

One other thing to look forward to in April, besides the supermoon, is the beginning of spring and summer meteor showers.

The Lyrid meteor shower runs April 16-25, peaking on the 22nd and 23rd. It’s not the best of the year, reliably producing only around 20 meteors an hour, but enough of them have bright dust trails that it’s worth searching for them in the early morning sky. A relatively new moon will make for dark skies and ideal viewing conditions.

This article originally appeared on the Agoura Hills Patch