When it rises this weekend, Aprilâs rare Pink/Paschal Moon will be a micromoon â except that itâs really not pink. But it does let everyone know when to expect the Easter Bunny.Â
Wyomingites can see the Pink micromoon now; it began Saturday and also is near its peak Sunday. Itâs smaller than a normal moon and not a single shade of pink, despite its colorful name.
The moon has remained mostly unchanged for hundreds of millions of years, yet the full moon looks a little different when it appears every month. The variety depends on our perspective and the moonâs slow but steady attempt to escape us.
âThe rate at which the moon changes is not on the timescale of a human lifetime,â said Max Gilbraith, planetarium coordinator at the University of Wyoming. âBut we see different states of the moon throughout the year, so thereâs always something a little different to see each month. No two full moons are the same.â
April Showers, April Flowers?
Thereâs a name for the full moon of each month of the year. Juneâs is the Strawberry Moon, Augustâs is the Sturgeon Moon, and Novemberâs is the Beaver Moon.
Theyâre not astronomical terms. The origin of the monthly moon names is credited to North Americaâs colonial period when colonists and Indigenous tribes named the moons to reflect seasonal goings-on.
The aphorism is âApril showers bring May flowers,â but Aprilâs Pink Moon is believed to have been named for the growth of âmountain phlox,â the pink wildflower that blooms across the eastern U.S. at the beginning of spring. April showers bring their own flowers.
If thatâs too dull a name for you, another American Indian name for Aprilâs full moon is the Breaking Ice Moon. The Anglo-Saxons called it the Egg Moon (a possible reference to the Easter Bunny) and Neo-Pagans called it the Awakening Moon.
Gilbraith said moon names donât have any scientific significance among astronomers, given that we always see the same moon. Nevertheless, he isnât surprised to see âPink Moonâ and the other monthly moon names pop up among his peers.
âWe might occasionally differentiate between the different moons of the seasons,â he said, âbut as far as a modern astrophysics discussion might be concerned, the Wolf Moon, harvest moon and Flower Moon donât have any input. Iâve never seen them used in a paper.â
The Pink Moon can never be a blue moon, as a blue moon is the second full moon in the span of a month. The Pink Moon is always the first full moon of April, so it can't be blue. That, however, doesn't rule out the possibility of a lunar purple April.Â
Micromoon
The Pink Moon wonât appear pink when it rises, but there will be something noticeably different about it. It will be the smallest full moon of 2025.
A micromoon occurs when the moon is at its furthest point from Earth â further than 251,655 miles away from the center of our planet. For comparison, the moonâs average distance from Earth is 238,854 miles.
That 20,000-mile difference is enough to make the moon appear between 5% and 9% smaller than an average full moon. Most people wonât notice the difference, but Gilbraith said itâs easy to observe the differences in each monthâs full moon.
âBut if you were to keep track of the moon every given month, it will look a little bit smaller or bigger, and a little higher or lower in the sky than the last moon,â he said.
The opposite of a micromoon is a supermoon, when the moon appears bigger and brighter than usual. There were several supermoons in 2024, including four in a row between August and November, but we have another six months of waiting before the next supermoon.
âWeâll get our next supermoon on Oct. 6,â Gilbraith said. âEveryone loves a supermoon.â
Drifting Apart
The moon was formed when a Mars-sized protoplanet called Theia collided with Earth around 4.4 billion years ago. The apocalyptic amount of debris from the collision consolidated into a single mass, becoming Earthâs only moon.Â
After its creation, the moon would have appeared over two times larger than it does today because it was much closer. It hasnât changed much since then.Â
There was some volcanism on its surface shortly after it formed, but the moon didnât have the warmth and mass to maintain that kind of geologic activity. Gilbraith said the âMan on the Moonâ has been there for billions of years, as the âfaceâ is a series of basins and craters covered with basalt, the black rock that forms over cooling lava flows.
âMagma came out of cracks on the moonâs surface created by impact craters that punched through the thin surface,â he said. âThe moon was still molten then, but we think that process ended a long time ago. But the dark spots on the moon are lava flows from this very early period after the moonâs formation.â
However, the two planetary bodies have been drifting apart ever since. Gilbraith said the moon is steadily putting more distance between itself and us, and at the current rate of separation, weâre running out of time to witness one of the most spectacular celestial events.
âThe moon will eventually be too small in the sky to completely cover the disc of the sun,â he said. âTotal solar eclipses won't be possible anymore because the moon wonât be close enough to the Earth.â
How much more time do we have to see total solar eclipses? Another seven million years, give or take.
A lack of future solar eclipses wonât mean much to Wyomingites reading this story. The last total solar eclipse over Wyoming occurred on Aug. 21, 2017. There wonât be another until July 3, 2084, and totality will only be visible from Evanston.
âWith total solar eclipses, if you can make an effort and travel to see them, you can catch one every nine months or so,â Gilbraith said. âOr you can stand in one spot and get one every 400 years.â
Pedro Paschal Moon?
This yearâs Pink Moon is also known as the Paschal Moon. Itâs a name not to honor the actor but to determine the ever-changing date of Easter.
In 325 A.D., the Catholic Church determined that Easter Sunday would be celebrated on the first Sunday following Aprilâs full moon. The Latin word for Easter is âPascha,â thus the Paschal Moon.
April 20 is Easter Sunday in 2025, the first Sunday after the Pink/Paschal Moon, not counting Sunday, April 13, when the full moon will still be visible until it sets at 6:36 a.m. Anyone who doesnât understand that logic can take it up with the Holy See in Vatican City.
Wyomingites wonât have to work hard to see the Pink Paschal micromoon. Look east after sunset, and itâll be there.
âThere's an exact moment the moon is perfectly full, which is when itâs perfectly opposite of the sun,â Gilbraith said, âbut itâll be at least 99% full.â
He also said that, âIt wonât be pink because âPink Moonâ isnât literal, but weâll take their word for it.â
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Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.