by MarkBour » Mon Jan 11, 2021 5:09 pm
De58te wrote: ↑Mon Jan 11, 2021 1:09 pm
Question, if the Moon's phases for the year are hard to predict for professional APOD astronomers, then how can my "Farmer's Almanac" get the Moon's phases correct right down to the hour and minutes, Greenwich Time, when they already published on 1st December of the previous year. [I bought my copy on 2nd December.]
No, it's not hard for professional APOD astronomers. The caption is phrased as an educator would phrase it: "This is not easy, young pupil, but I'm going to show it to you." Your Farmer's Almanac probably got its information from an astronomer.
I really loved this APOD, I could stare at it for a very long time noticing more details. It is incredibly precise, way beyond a simple listing of phases: From it I can tell that on the night of my birthday this year, which is a full 10 months away, the Moon will progress downward from 69% illuminated to about 65% illuminated over the course of the night (more exact than "waning gibbous"). Early in the evening, the craters DesCartes, Aristoteles, Sacrobosco and Maurolycus will be right on the terminator. But then, during the evening, the terminator will move past the site of Apollo 16's lander, and reach the craters Boscovich, Geber, Gemma Frisius, and Jacobi. The Moon's apparent diameter that evening will be 1782.7 arcseconds. Its position angle will be 7.971 degrees . It even tells me where to look for her in the sky, but I don't think I'll really need that help, she's kind of hard to miss.
[quote=De58te post_id=309650 time=1610370578 user_id=141631]
Question, if the Moon's phases for the year are hard to predict for professional APOD astronomers, then how can my "Farmer's Almanac" get the Moon's phases correct right down to the hour and minutes, Greenwich Time, when they already published on 1st December of the previous year. [I bought my copy on 2nd December.]
[/quote]
No, it's not hard for professional APOD astronomers. The caption is phrased as an educator would phrase it: "This is not easy, young pupil, but I'm going to show it to you." Your Farmer's Almanac probably got its information from an astronomer.
I really loved this APOD, I could stare at it for a very long time noticing more details. It is incredibly precise, way beyond a simple listing of phases: From it I can tell that on the night of my birthday this year, which is a full 10 months away, the Moon will progress downward from 69% illuminated to about 65% illuminated over the course of the night (more exact than "waning gibbous"). Early in the evening, the craters DesCartes, Aristoteles, Sacrobosco and Maurolycus will be right on the terminator. But then, during the evening, the terminator will move past the site of Apollo 16's lander, and reach the craters Boscovich, Geber, Gemma Frisius, and Jacobi. The Moon's apparent diameter that evening will be 1782.7 arcseconds. Its position angle will be 7.971 degrees . It even tells me where to look for her in the sky, but I don't think I'll really need that help, she's kind of hard to miss.