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自己晚上照的。處理過變得很清晰。

雲層很厚所以很難照= =

 

The full moon falls today at 16:37 (4:37 p.m.) Universal Time. For the central United States, we subtract 6 hours to find that the moon turns full at 10:37 a.m. Central Time. That’s during the daylight hours today, while the moon is still beneath our U.S. horizon.

For us in North America, as the moon climbs over our east-northeast horizon around sunset tonight, it’ll be a touch past full moon. Nonetheless, tonight’s Long Night Moon will look mighty large and bright as it beams from dusk till dawn.

This will be largest, closest moon since March 8, 1993. Today, the moon will swing closest to Earth at 21:48 (9:48 p.m.) Universal Time. That’s 4:48 p.m. Eastern Time for the northeastern US, where the moon will be up at dusk and early evening. Check our almanac page for the moon’s rising time in your sky.

At new and full moon, the sun and moon line up to create extra high spring tides along the ocean shorelines. However, the extremely close full moon will accentuate these tides all the more over the next several days. If accompanied by storms, these high tides may cause coastal flooding.

Will this very close full moon look extra bright? Look outside tonight and see what you think!

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