Rare `Blue Moon` lights up the night sky

A full Moon rose in the eastern twilight sky for the second time this month at 19:28 PM IST.

New Delhi: A full Moon rose in the eastern twilight sky for the second time this month at 19:28 PM IST.

When a second full moon in a calendar month appears in the night sky, the occurrence is known as a `Blue Moon`

The first full Moon occurred on August 1st in the Americas and on August 2nd in Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia.

Many people use the expression “once in a blue Moon” to mean something that occurs rarely, but tonight`s big, bright orb is a “Blue Moon” too.

While the former meaning can be traced back centuries, the latter definition is much newer — and it’s wrong.

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

“This colourful term is actually a cylindrical goof that worked its way into the pages of Sky and Telescope back in March 1946, and it spread to the world from there,” he stated.

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 meant something else. For example, said 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, 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 tonight, it won’t happen again until July 2015.

ANI

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