By SHIORI OGAWA/ Staff Writer
September 22, 2021 at 19:05 JST
People across Japan were treated to a full moon during the mid-autumn festival on Sept. 21 for the first time in eight years.
The moon that rises on Aug. 15 on the lunar calendar, equivalent to Sept. 21 on the standard Gregorian calendar this year, has inspired a long tradition of moon viewing on that day in Japan, according to the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
The moon that rises on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, known as “Chushu no meigetsu” (beautiful mid-autumn moon), is not necessarily a full moon, as it travels around Earth in an elliptical orbit.
A full moon will appear on the mid-autumn festival day for the next three years, but moon watchers will have to wait until 2030 to see the rare phenomena again, according to the observatory.
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CORRECTION
This article was corrected on Oct. 4, 2021.
References to a harvest moon in explaining “Chushu no meigetsu” were dropped to avoid confusion.
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