Why Does the Moon Look Larger at the Horizon? We Asked a NASA Scientist: Episode 50
2 min read
Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater)
Weβve been talking about this for 2,000 years. Aristotle mentions it. And in our own time, scientists are designing experiments to figure out exactly whatβs going on. But thereβs no consensus yet.
Hereβs what we do know.
The atmosphere isnβt magnifying the Moon. If anything, atmospheric refraction squashes it a little bit. And the Moonβs not closer to us at the horizon. Itβs about 1.5 percent farther away. Also, it isnβt just the Moon. Constellations look huge on the horizon, too.
One popular idea is that this is a variation on the Ponzo illusion. Everything in our experience seems to shrink as it recedes toward the horizon β I mean clouds and planes and cars and ships. But the Moon doesnβt do that. So our minds make up a story to reconcile this inconsistency. Somehow the Moon gets bigger when itβs at the horizon. Thatβs one popular hypothesis, but there are others. And weβre still waiting for the experiment that will convince everyone that we understand this.
So why does the Moon look larger on the horizon? We donβt really know, but scientists are still trying to figure it out.
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