Weather

Rare Planetary Alignment, Supermoon, ‘Blue Clouds’ Over NY In June

Here are the dates you need to mark down on your calendars.

The month of June will provide plenty for astronomers to see in the skies.
The month of June will provide plenty for astronomers to see in the skies. (Scott Anderson/Patch)

NEW YORK — Making a to-do list for all that June has to offer? Well, put sky watching on your list. There’s plenty to gaze at in the skies over New York, including a rare planetary alignment that happens right after the first of the 2022 run of three consecutive supermoons.

And with the summer solstice later this month there’s a chance to see what some call “electric blue clouds,” or noctilucent clouds, according to the private weather company AccuWeather.

What dates should amateur astronomers in New York bookmark?

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The full moon on June 13-14 qualifies as a supermoon, a term coined by astrologer Richard Nolle in 1979 to define a new or full moon that occurs when it is at its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit.

No one paid much attention to Nolle’s definition until 2011, “when the full moon arrived at an exceptionally close perigee, coming within 126 miles (203 kilometers) of its closest possible approach to Earth," Joe Rao wrote for Space.com.

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The July and August full moons also meet Nolle’s definition. Patch will have more about those full moons when they get closer, but before we move on to the stunning planetary alignment, one last thing about the June supermoon:

Early indigenous populations named the moons to track the seasons. The June full moon is known as the full strawberry moon, so named by the Algonquin, Ojibwe, Dakota and Lakota peoples, among others, because it coincides with the ripening of strawberries, according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac.

Ah, Summer! And Blue Clouds!

The astronomical summer officially begins in New York at 5:13 a.m. EDT on Tuesday, June 21. It’s the longest day and shortest night of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. Accordingly, the June solstice marks the start of winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

There’s really nothing to see with the arrival of the solstice, although shadows at noon will be shorter than at any other time of the year.

But keep an eye on the nighttime skies for the electric blue noctilucent clouds, the highest in Earth’s atmosphere, which float about 50 miles above our planet’s surface near the edge of space, which starts at an altitude of 62 miles, according to AccuWeather.

These clouds, formed by ice crystals or dust from meteor smoke, are only visible for a few weeks between the end of May and the start of August. Because they’re so high in the sky, noctilucent clouds are illuminated by the sun long after it has gone to bed on Earth, and appear as blue-white swirls, curls and tendrils that shimmer in the sky.

Ta-Da! Planets Align

One of the most anticipated celestial events of June is the rare alignment of planets that won’t occur again until August 2040, according to AccuWeather.

A procession of planets — in order, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn — will be visible in the predawn hours before the end of the month. The best date to mark is before 5 a.m. local time on June 24, when a crescent moon joins the planetary parade.

Best of all, the planetary alignment is visible without a telescope, though AccuWeather notes that Mercury may be hard to spot because it’s the dimmest of the planets and will be the lowest in the sky.

The alignment begins around mid-month and will only be visible for about two weeks.

What, No Meteors?

And who knows? You may see a meteor or two. There’s no shower expected, but meteors are always flying and several shooting stars an hour are usually visible on any given night, according to NASA.

The next meteor shower — the Delta Aquariids — doesn’t start until July 12. It runs through Aug. 2, peaking on July 28-29. Mark your calendars for that one, because a new moon means excellent viewing conditions for this shower, which produces about 20 meteors an hour at the peak.

Consider it a warm-up act for summer’s main shooting star event, the Perseids, famous for their fireballs. The shower runs from July 17 to Aug. 24, producing up to 60 shooting stars per hour at the Aug. 12-13 peak.


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