Supermoons, Full Moons 2014 and 2015 Schedule, Dates, Times, When to Expect Celestial Events

With the passing of the July 12 super-moon, people are yearning to know whether or not there would be more of this fascinating and incredible cosmic phenomenon. Every year a few of these super-moons come into effect, which are hard to miss seeing as they are large in size.

Super-moons are similar to full moons in the sense that they appear in the night sky in for its entirety. The only difference from regular full moons is that super-moons happen when the Moon comes the closest to Earth.

July 12's full moon is an example of a super-moon where the Moon is visibly largest from an Earthly perspective. The largest of all these super-moons will be occurring on August 10, The full moon, called Full Buck Moon, is only one of the five super-moons to occur this year.

The last super-moon for 2014 is set to occur on September 9, and the next one won't happen until next year.

After the last super-moon, regular full moons will come back, scheduled September 8, October 8, November 6, and December 6. The full moon on October 8 will radiate with a reddish tint, gaining it the of name, "blood moon."

For 2015, six super-moons will be occurring on January 20, February 18, March 20, August 29, September 28, and October 27. The super-moon happening on September 28 will be the largest of them in 2015.

Full moons for 2015 will occur on January 5, February 3, March 5, April 4, May 4, June 2, July 2, August 14, September 13, October 13, November 11, and December 11.