Don't forget to have a look at the supermoon on November 14
09:49PM Sat 5 Nov, 2016
There are two more times we will get to see a supermoon 2016.
We first saw one on Oct. 16, and we will see the last on Dec. 14. The second supermoon of the year, which will take place on Nov. 14, will be simply out of this world. The moon will be full on the same day as perigee for about two hours, which makes it an extra-supermoon.
The term supermoon has become a scientifically documented fact, originating in the astronomy theories of modern researchers, when the moon is within roughly 90 percent of its closest possible distance to Earth. The term is used today in a broader sense, describing a moon that is closer to Earth than usual.
The orbit of the moon is elliptical, which makes one side (perigee) approximately 30,000 miles closer to Earth than the other (apogee). A syzygy, as the phenomenon is described, is the scientific name for when our planet, the sun and the moon line up while the moon is orbiting the Earth.
This phenomenon makes the perigee-syzygy of the system created between our planet, the moon and the sun an event as our natural satellite is positioned on the other side of our planet, which allows us to experience a supermoon.