Why does the moon look so big now?

Have you noticed the moon in last few days, it looks really big.

**Why does the moon look so big now? **
For the past few nights the moon has appeared larger than many people have seen it for almost 20 years. It is the world’s largest optical illusion, and one of its most enduring mysteries.
It can put a man in space, land a probe on Mars, but Nasa can’t explain why the moon appears bigger when it’s on the horizon than when it’s high in the night sky.

The mystery of the Moon Illusion, witnessed by millions of people this week, has puzzled great thinkers for centuries. There have even been books devoted to the matter.

Not since June 1987 has the moon been this low in the sky, accentuating the illusion even further.

But opinion differs on why there is such an apparent discrepancy in size between a moon on the horizon and one in the distant sky.

Two main theories dominate. The first, known as the Ponzo Illusion - named after Mario Ponzo who demonstrated it in 1913 - suggests that the mind judges the size of an object based on its background.
Ponzo drew two identical bars across a picture of railway tracks which converge as they recede into the distance (see pop-up, right). The upper bar looks wider because it appears to span the rails, as opposed to the lower bar, which sits between the rails.

In the same way, with a low-lying moon the trees and houses, which are familiar foreground reference points, appear smaller against the moon, which appears bigger than it really is.

Sceptics of this theory point to airline pilots who also see the illusion, although they have no ground reference points.

Alternatively, there’s the theory that the brain perceives the sky as a flattened dome rather than the true hemisphere it really is.

Try for yourself

The theory runs that we believe things immediately overhead, flying birds for example, are closer than birds on the horizon. When the moon is on the horizon, the brain therefore miscalculates its true size and distance.

Then there are those who scoff that this is an illusion at all. They, at least, can be proved wrong. Hold a coin up to a low-lying moon to and compare differences in size. Any difference will remain exactly the same, as one traces the trajectory of the moon through the night.

Indeed, it’s said that by viewing a low moon though a rolled up piece of paper, to block out the surroundings, the illusion immediately vanishes.

But experts have yet to agree on either or, indeed, any explanation. For the moment at least, the real reason for the Moon Illusion remains up in the air.

Story from BBC NEWS:

Re: Why does the moon look so big now?

impressive. I've always wondered about this phenomenon

Re: Why does the moon look so big now?

the other day i was driving on the highway 410 from brampton, and I was thinking about the same thing! The moon was soo BIG ..first i thought i was seeing things but honestly, I cant recall the last time that I ever saw the moon that big before! its amazing!
Time to invest in a $200 telescope :)

Re: Why does the moon look so big now?

i was watching this show on discovery channal (yeah i have no life lol).
anyways..... they said that moon is actually moving away from the earth. because the velocity of the moon is increasing, making the moon 1 inch further from the earth every year. Well because of this years are gonna b longer, but this is a slow process, and it takes 100's maybe 1000+ years to make a diff.

Then i asked myself a question, is that why Islamic calendar is off by 10 days.

Re: Why does the moon look so big now?

Nope, Islamic calendar is off by 10 days to geogorean because of the different orbits and paths of Moon and the Sun.

Geogorean calendar is based on Earth's full journey around the Sun that takes 365 days and six hours. Since its not an even number to divide into Months and even a year, so they come up with the leap year (366 days every 4th year) and twelve months that have different number of days (average at 30).

Where as Lunar calendar is based on Moon's journey around our Earth. Moon's distance to the Earth and its velocity on its path are static, so is our Earth's movement on its own axis. The age of the Moon varies from 28 to 29 days and the new moon can emerge or have born in the following night. This is due to the positions of Sun and the Moon on Horizon, which could be different.

Re: Why does the moon look so big now?

^ thanks for this info, i had some confusion there.

re:topic -- sunday nite, bro and I were driving back home around 2am and it was a half moon -- but very big! We both noticed it and pointed it out. Even tried to take some pics but they didnt come out so well.