Learn Why the Moon Appears Larger on the Horizon
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I have a question about a smiling moon? In the northeast area of US I have been seeing alot of the smiling moon, what is that about?
The crescent moon looks like a smile in the winter and spring and like a backwards "C" in the summer and fall. This is related to the Moon's path, where the Sun is, and how and where it shines on the Moon.
I'm sorry. But I think this article is nonsense! Yes, our lens-shaped atmosphere has nothing at all to do with how the moon looks through its convex boundaries.
The article isn't Moon lore; it's written by leading astronomer, Bob Berman, director of Overlook Observatory in Woodstock (NY), director of Storm King Observatory in Cornwall (NY), founder of the Catskill Astronomical Society--and long-time astronomy editor of The Old Farmer's 蜜桃恋人!
Unfortunately, you should have consulted with a neuroscientist rather than an astronomer. This illusion has nothing to do with astronomy. It also has nothing to do with any comparison with other objects on the horizon. Rather, it is due to the fact that the human brain has evolved to judge the distance of objects in the sky based on the fact that they are always relatively close to the surface of the earth. Thus in normal experience. A bird directly overhead is much, much closer than one at the same height that appears near the horizon. As a consequence, a bird that occupied the same angular portion of our field of view at the horizon as one directly overhead would rightly be perceived as much larger. Because the moon is so far away, it does actually occupy the same angular portion of our field of view no matter where it is in the sky. Thus, at the horizon, our brain thinks it must be much larger. This also explains why it seems to follow us as we travel in a car.
Tough crowd! I love this site and what they have to say about the moon!