Watch: Blue supermoon rises above South Korean capital Seoul
Watch as a rare blue supermoon, the first observed in 2024, rises above South Korea's capital Seoul on Monday, 19 August.
A blue moon is not named after the colour and instead refers to the second full moon in one calendar month or four full moons within a season.
The moon will appear red or yellow at dusk because of the light refracting around the atmosphere at the horizon.
Today's display will be the first of four consecutive supermoons this year, according to Nasa.
A supermoon looks brighter and bigger than the regular moon as its orbit brings it closer to earth.
The moon will sit 23,000km closer to Earth than usual on Monday night.
The UK last witnessed a blue supermoon in August 2023; the next one is reportedly not until 2037.
The moon will appear full for three days, from Sunday morning through early Wednesday morning, Nasa confirmed.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments