The biggest full moon of the year will rise Saturday (May 5) as Earth's
only satellite swings into its perigee, or closest approach to Earth.
This so-called "supermoon" will appear extra big and extra bright.
In honor of the moon's big show,
we're dispelling a few myths about the Earth's rocky satellite. Read on
for the real scoop on the moon's role in madness, the history of the
moon landing, and how that whole green cheese thing got started.Myth 1: The Moon Makes Us Crazy
The word lunacy traces its roots to the word "lunar," and plenty of
people, from nurses to police officers, will tell you that things get
wild around the full moon.
But this non-supernatural equivalent of the werewolf myth doesn't hold water. A 1985 review of the literature on the timing of mental illness and the moon
found that the folklore that links the full moon with mental
breakdowns, criminal behavior and other disturbances has no basis in
scientific data. Nor has research turned up a link between the moon's
phase and surgery outcomes — though pets are more likely to need a trip to the emergency room during a full moon, likely because owners keep them out and about later on nights when the moon brightens up the sky.
Myth 2: The Supermoon Can Cause Disasters
The reason we have supermoons is because the moon's orbit is not
perfectly circular. When it swings closer to Earth on its elliptical
path, the moon does exert a bit more of a gravitational pull on our
planet. But it's nothing Earth can't handle.
Tidal forces around the world will be particularly high and low, with
the moon exerting 42 percent more force at its closest point to Earth
than it does at its farthest, according to Joe Rao,
SPACE.com's skywatching columnist. This extra force doesn't have an
appreciable effect on disasters such as earthquakes and tsunamis,
however.
"A lot of studies have been done on this kind of thing by USGS
scientists and others," John Bellini, a geophysicist at the U.S.
Geological Survey told LiveScience's sister site Life's Little Mysteries. "They haven't found anything significant at all."
Myth 3: The Moon Landing Was a Hoax
We've got video. We've got rocks. We've got a dozen astronauts who have
proudly returned to Earth to recall walking on our great satellite. But
conspiracy theories claiming that the moon landing was faked just won't
die. [Top 10 Conspiracy Theories]
These moon hoax theories
are multitudinous and varied, ranging from claims that there was no
dust on the Apollo 11 Lander footpads so the Lander must have never left
a secret soundstage (In fact, dust on the moon doesn't hang in the air
as it does on Earth due to a lack of gravity, so dust kicked up by the
landing would have been hurled away from the Lander) to theories about
faked rock specimens (In reality, moon rocks have been researched by
NASA scientists and independent researchers alike. They're unlike any
Earth rocks, lacking water-bearing minerals and bearing tiny meteoroid
craters from the specks of dust that would have been burned up in
Earth's atmosphere but which landed on the surface of the airless moon.)
As thinly sourced as it is, the hoax theories can be frustrating to
those who risked their lives to get to the moon. In 2002, Buzz Aldrin,
one of the members of the original 1969 Apollo 11 mission, was dogged by
conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel at an event. When Sibrel blocked
Aldrin's path and called him a "coward" and a "liar," the
then-72-year-old astronaut punched Sibrel in the face.
Myth 4: The Moon Is Made of Green Cheese
The myth to dispel here isn't so much about the moon's makeup —
definitely not cheese — but rather the idea that anyone ever believed
the old "the moon is green cheese" canard at all. In fact, the cheese
myth seemed to have started with a sardonic little couplet by English
poet John Heywood (1497-1580), who wrote, "Ye set circumquaques to make me beleue/ Or thinke, that the moone is made of gréene chéese." [10 Beasts and Dragons: How Reality Made Myth]
In other words, the first known mention of the moon being green cheese
was actually mocking the idea that anyone would believe that the moon
was green cheese. Heywood apparently underestimated early 20th-century
children: A 1902 study published in the American Journal of Psychology
surveyed young children about their beliefs about the moon and found
that the most common explanation for what it might be made of was
cheese. Other theories included rags, God, yellow paper and "dead people
who join hands in a circle of light."
Today, Americans remember the 1950s and 1960s-era space race as a time
when NASA had broad public support. In fact, levels of support for human lunar exploration were close to what is seen today.
During NASA's Apollo program, 45 percent to 60 percent of Americans
believed the U.S. was spending too much money on spaceflight, according
to a 2003 paper published in the journal Space Policy. Polls in the
1960s ranked spaceflight near the top of the list of programs that
Americans wanted cut, study researcher and Smithsonian space historian
Roger Launius found.
"[T]he public was never enthusiastic about human lunar exploration, and
especially about the costs associated with it," Launius wrote. The
enthusiasm it had "waned over time," he continued, "until by the end of
the Apollo program in December 1972 one has the image of the program as
something akin to a limping marathoner straining with every muscle to
reach the finish line before collapsing."
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