Solstice Moon Illusion
The full moon rising over Manchester, Maryland. Credit: Edmund E. Kasaitis.
The Ponzo Illusion. Image credit: Dr. Tony Phillips.
The "flattened sky" model for the Moon Illusion. Source: Explaining the Moon Illusion by Lloyd Kaufman and James H. Kaufman.
Monday, June 16, 2008
Sometimes you just can't believe your eyes. This week is one of those times.
On Wednesday night, June 18th, step outside at sunset and look around. You'll see a giant form rising in the east. At first glance it looks like the full Moon. It has craters and seas and the face of a man, but this "moon" is strangely inflated. It's huge!
You've just experienced the Moon Illusion.
There's no better time to see it. The full Moon of June 18th is a "solstice moon", coming only two days before the beginning of northern summer. This is significant because the sun and full Moon are like kids on a see-saw; when one is high, the other is low. This week's high solstice sun gives us a low, horizon-hugging Moon and a strong Moon Illusion.
Sky watchers have known for thousands of years that low-hanging moons look unnaturally big. At first, astronomers thought the atmosphere must be magnifying the Moon near the horizon, but cameras showed that is not the case. Moons on film are the same size regardless of elevation: example. Apparently, only human beings see giant moons.
Are we crazy?
After all these years, scientists still aren't sure. When you look at the Moon, rays of moonlight converge and form an image about 0.15 mm wide on the retina in the back of your eye. High moons and low moons make the same sized spot, yet the brain insists one is bigger than the other. Go figure.
A similar illusion was discovered in 1913 by Mario Ponzo, who drew two identical bars across a pair of converging lines, like the railroad tracks pictured right. The upper yellow bar looks wider because it spans a greater apparent distance between the rails. This is the "Ponzo Illusion."
Some researchers believe that the Moon Illusion is Ponzo's Illusion, with trees and houses playing the role of Ponzo's converging lines. Foreground objects trick your brain into thinking the Moon is bigger than it really is.
But there's a problem: Airline pilots flying at very high altitudes sometimes experience the Moon Illusion without any objects in the foreground. What tricks their eyes?
Maybe it's the shape of the sky. Humans perceive the sky as a flattened dome, with the zenith nearby and the horizon far away. It makes sense; birds flying overhead are closer than birds on the horizon. When the moon is near the horizon, your brain, trained by watching birds (and clouds and airplanes), miscalculates the Moon's true distance and size.
There are other explanations, too. It doesn't matter which is correct, though, if all you want to do is see a big beautiful Moon. The best time to look is around moonrise, when the Moon is peeking through trees and houses or over mountain ridges. The table below (scroll down) lists rise times for selected US cities.
A fun activity: Look at the Moon directly and then through a narrow opening of some kind. For example, 'pinch' the moon between your thumb and forefinger or view it through a cardboard tube, which hides the foreground terrain. Can you make the optical illusion vanish?
Stop that! You won't want to miss the Moon Illusion.
Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
Moonrise
over Selected US Cities
If your city does not appear
in the list, click
here for more data
from the US Naval Observatory.
| City |
Time
Zone |
June
17 |
June
18 |
June
19 |
| New
York, NY |
EDT |
8:07 p.m.
|
8:58 p.m.
|
9:41 p.m.
|
| San
Diego, CA |
PDT |
7:37 p.m.
|
8:28 p.m.
|
9:13 p.m.
|
| Washington,
DC |
EDT |
8:13 p.m.
|
9:03 p.m.
|
9:47 p.m.
|
| Honolulu,
HI |
HST
|
6:53 p.m.
|
7:44 p.m.
|
8:31 p.m.
|
| Chicago,
IL |
CDT |
8:09 p.m.
|
8:59 p.m.
|
9:42 p.m.
|
| Houston,
TX |
CDT |
7:58 p.m.
|
8:49 p.m.
|
9:35 p.m.
|
| Denver,
CO |
MDT |
8:12 p.m.
|
9:02 p.m.
|
9:45 p.m.
|
| Miami,
FL |
EDT |
7:43 p.m.
|
8:35 p.m.
|
9:22 p.m.
|
| Seattle,
WA |
PDT
|
9:02 p.m.
|
9:51 p.m.
|
10:30 p.m.
|
| Anchorage,
AK |
ADT |
12:30 a.m.
|
1:04 a.m.
|
1:15 a.m.
|
| Augusta,
ME |
EDT
|
8:06 p.m.
|
8:57 p.m.
|
9:39 p.m.
|
|
Thanks to
Science@NASA for this article.
This article has been viewed 10809 time(s).
More Astronomy
Brilliant star in a colorful neighborhoodVery massive stars live fast and die young. Some of these stellar beacons have such intense radiation passing through their thick atmospheres late in their lives that they shed material into space many millions of times more quickly than relatively sedate stars such as the Sun.
Astronomer finds planets in unusually intimate dance around dying starHundreds of extrasolar planets have been found over the past decade and a half, most of them solitary worlds orbiting their parent star in seeming isolation. With further observation, however, one in three of these systems have been found to have two or more planets. Planets, it appears, come in bunches.
Source: California Institute of Technology | Views: 192 |
Comments: 0Potentially hazardous asteroid might collide with the Earth in 2182"The total impact probability of asteroid '(101955) 1999 RQ36' can be estimated in 0.00092 –approximately one-in-a-thousand chance-, but what is most surprising is that over half of this chance (0.00054) corresponds to 2182," explains to SINC MarÃa Eugenia Sansaturio.
Source: FECYT - Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology | Views: 154 |
Comments: 0Source: University of Strathclyde | Views: 270 |
Comments: 0Camera yields best Red Planet map everThe best Mars map ever made is now available online for planetary scientists and armchair astronauts alike. And citizen scientists invited to help make it even better.
Source: Arizona State University | Views: 351 |
Comments: 0Black hole jerked around twiceScientists have found evidence that a giant black hole has been jerked around twice, causing its spin axis to point in a different direction from before. This discovery, made with new data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, might explain several mysterious-looking objects found throughout the Universe.
Source: Chandra X-ray Center | Views: 284 |
Comments: 0Team finds evidence of water in moon mineralsThat dry, dusty moon overhead? Seems it isn't quite as dry as it's long been thought to be. Although you won't find oceans, lakes, or even a shallow puddle on its surface, scientists have found structurally bound hydroxyl groups (i.e., water) in a mineral in a lunar rock returned to Earth by the Apollo program.
Source: California Institute of Technology | Views: 289 |
Comments: 0Stars just got biggerA team of astronomers led by Paul Crowther, Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Sheffield, has used ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT), as well as archival data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, to study two young clusters of stars, NGC 3603 and RMC 136a in detail.