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Supermoon 2023: Indian Cities Witness The Giant Moon, Next One Expected On August 30 - Here's All About It

The 'supermoon' was visible from Delhi, Lucknow, Bengaluru and Punjab. The last time two supermoons were seen in the same month was in 2018, and the next such phenomenon will be witnessed in 2037.

The Supermoon was visible from different cities in India on Tuesday
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India on Tuesday joined the rest of the world in witnessing the supermoon, the first of the two this month while the other one is expected to be visible by the end of the month on August 30.

According to astrophysicist Debiprosad Duari, the last time two supermoons were seen in the same month was in 2018, and the next such phenomenon will be witnessed in 2037.

It has been reported that the Tuesday night  'supermoon' event was visible from Delhi, Lucknow, Bengaluru, and Punjab, but sky gazers in Kolkata missed the chance due to a thick blanket of clouds.

The term 'supermoon' is used when the moon is closest to the Earth.

What's the science behind the Supermoon?

While delineating the science behind the Supermoon, astrophysicist Debiprosad Duari said, "The moon goes around the Earth once in 27.3 days in an elliptic orbit. As a result, at some point in its orbit, it will be farthest from the Earth, the distant point being called the apogee, and at some other time it will be closest to Earth, which is called perigee."

"When we have a full moon near the perigee, closest to the Earth, we get what is termed as a supermoon," he explained.

"It is exciting as this coincides with the time Chandrayaan 3 module will be injected into the lunar transfer trajectory," Duari said.

Chandrayaan 3 is expected to make a soft landing on the moon on August 23.

According to Duari, a supermoon seems 7 percent bigger and 16 percent brighter from Earth than a normal full moon.

The average distance between the Earth and its moon is 3,84,000 km. The distance can vary because of the elliptical shape of the moon's orbit around the Earth, and can range from 3,56,000 km at perigee to 4,04,000 km at apogee.

On Tuesday night, the moon was at a distance of 3,57,530 km from the Earth, while on August 30, the moon will be even closer, 3,57,344 km from the Earth, Duari said.

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