The moon has a tail, and Earth wears it like a scarf once a month

The tail is invisible to the naked eye but appears on all-sky cameras during every new moon.

An animation showing how the moon's sodium "tail" appears from Earth. Only a few days after each new moon, when the moon moves between Earth and the sun, is the tail visible from Earth.
An animation showing how the moon's sodium "tail" appears from Earth. Only a few days after each new moon, when the moon moves between Earth and the sun, is the tail visible from Earth.
(Image credit: James O'Donoghue)

Like a comet soaring through the cosmos, the moon is followed by a slender tail of irradiated matter — and Earth passes directly through it once a month.

According to a study published March 3 in the journal JGR Planets, the lunar tail is made of millions of sodium atoms blasted out of the lunar soil and into space by meteor strikes and then pushed hundreds of thousands of miles downstream by solar radiation. For a few days a month, when the new moon sits between Earth and the sun, our planet's gravity drags that sodium tail into a long beam that wraps around Earth's atmosphere before blasting into space on the opposite side.

Brandon Specktor
Editor

Brandon is the space / physics editor at Live Science. With more than 20 years of editorial experience, his writing has appeared in The Washington Post, Reader's Digest, CBS.com, the Richard Dawkins Foundation website and other outlets. He holds a bachelor's degree in creative writing from the University of Arizona, with minors in journalism and media arts. His interests include black holes, asteroids and comets, and the search for extraterrestrial life.