The final full moon of the year rises on Wednesday, Dec. 7.
December's full moon — also nicknamed the Cold Moon — officially begins at 11:09 p.m. ET (4:09 a.m. UTC on Dec. 8), although the moon will also appear bright and full in the sky beginning on Tuesday, Dec. 6, and lasting until Thursday, Dec. 8.
As for the moon's nickname, sky watchers in the Northern Hemisphere will have little trouble guessing why this month's moon is dubbed the "cold" one. Rising mere weeks before the winter solstice (Dec. 21), this moon takes to the sky during one of the coldest, darkest parts of the year. According to the Maine Farmer's Almanac, which began publishing Native American names for moons beginning in the 1930s, this moon's moniker originates with the Mohawk tribe of what is now the northeastern United States and Southeastern Canada. The name has since become popular in mainstream coverage of the moon's phases.
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Other popular names for the December full moon include the Long Night Moon (a reference to the forthcoming solstice — the longest night of the year in the Northern Hemisphere), the Snow Moon, the Hoar Frost Moon (a type of feathery frost that often emerges during cold conditions) and the Frost Exploding Trees Moon, according to the Almanac.
But there is something else going on with the Red Planet, too: Overnight, from Dec. 7 to Dec. 8, Mars will be "in opposition" to Earth, meaning it is on the opposite side of Earth as the sun. In other words, the sun, Earth and Mars will all align on an invisible 180-degree line, just like the Sun, Earth and moon do during a full moon. This is what makes the lunar occultation of Mars possible; both bodies are orbiting on the same side of Earth.
Mars completes an orbit of the sun every 687 days, or roughly twice as long as it takes Earth to complete an orbit. Due to the different orbital periods of the two planets, opposition only occurs once every 26 months or so, according to NASA, so enjoy the Red Planet's cameo while it lasts.
The Virtual Telescope Project will host a livestream of the moon occulting Mars at opposition, beginning at 11:00 p.m. ET on Dec. 7 (4:00 a.m. UTC on Dec. 8). The stream can be found on the project's YouTube channel.
The next full moon is the Wolf Moon, trailing behind the New Year like a long hangover on Friday, Jan. 6, 2023.