Expert Voices

My Love Affair with the Moon (Op-Ed)

first quarter moon
The first quarter moon, captured precisely at that phase, plus 2 seconds. A nice terminator shadow perfectly divides the lunar surface into two. The photo was taken on Jan. 18, 2013, at 17:45:02 CST local time in Jadwin, Missouri, just 2 seconds after the predicted timing given by the U.S. Naval Observatory. I used an atomic clock to time the event — the additional 2 seconds were due to my own human reactions and the functioning of the camera.
(Image credit: Victor C. Rogus.)

Victor Rogus is an amateur astronomer, a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, in London, and this is the ninth in his series of exclusive Space.com posts about amateur astronomy. He contributed this article to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

The moon has always been a companion to the people of the Earth. We give it names for the various seasons, write songs about it, use it in artwork and consider it romantic. It causes the tides to rise and fall, and sometimes lights our way in the dark. The moon has fascinated me since I was a small child; I have heard it said that an infant held outside under the moon will often reach out for it as if it were within grasp. It is often the first target for beginning astronomers with their new telescopes, as it is bright and easy to find, and offers a world of fantastic sights unlike any we see anywhere in the visible universe. It is truly the Earth's own.

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