
Stargazing in April: Easter and the Moon
This spring, we're having to wait a long time for our moveable feast of eggs and chocolate: Easter Day falls on 20 April, near the end of its possible range of dates that span 22 March to 25 April. And if you're wondering why I'm talking about a religious festival in an astronomy column, the date of Easter is set fairly and squarely by what's happening in the sky.
According to the Bible, Jesus was crucified at Passover. And the date of the Passover is determined by the moon, in the Jewish lunar calendar.
The first month of this calendar, Nisan, is set by the spring equinox, the day that the sun rises due east and sets due west, and day and night are equal. Passover coincides with the full moon in Nisan, which is the first full moon after the spring equinox.
According to Christians, the Last Supper eaten by Jesus and his disciples was a Passover meal, and he was crucified the next day, on Passover itself. The celebrations for Christians – Easter – come on the following Sunday, the day of the resurrection.
To sum it up briefly, we can do no better than to turn to the words of the eighth century monk, the Venerable Bede: 'The Sunday following the Full Moon which falls on or after the equinox will give the lawful Easter.'
This means you can tell when Easter is due just by looking at the sky! First, wait until you see the Sun rising due east and setting due west: that's the spring solstice, which fell on 20 March this year. Now follow the Moon until it's Full – coming up on 13 April – and Easter will be the next Sunday, 20 April.
In other years, the formula gives very different results. If the Full Moon happens at the equinox, then Easter Sunday can come as early as 22 March, when we're surrounded by fresh spring flowers and hopping rabbits. That happened in 1818 - but not again until 2285.
On the other hand, the first Full Moon can be almost a month after the equinox, and – if that falls on a Sunday – we have to hang around another week for Easter Day. The latest date can be 25 April, as occurred in 1943, and next will be in 2038.
What's Up
Jupiter is glorious in the west after sunset, outshining all the stars. The crescent Moon lies near the giant planet on 30 April.
Higher up, you'll find Mars close to the twin stars of Gemini, Castor and Pollux: the Moon is very close to the Red Planet on 5 April. As it moves leftwards in the sky, Mars lines up with Castor and Pollux on 10 April, and it moves into the neighbouring constellation of Cancer by the end of the month.
Dominating the southern sky is the feline shape of Leo, a crouching lion in mythology. To its left is Virgo (the virgin) marked by a Y-shape of stars rising upwards from bright Spica. In the northeast, brilliant Vega is low in the horizon, the leading light of the little constellation Lyra.
On the night of 22 April, watch out for shooting stars speeding outwards from this region and streaking across the sky. The Lyrid shooting stars are specks of space dust burning up in the atmosphere as we cross a trail of debris shed by Comet Thatcher – discovered by American astronomer Alfred Thatcher in 1861 – as it pursues its 420-year orbit around the Sun.
If you're an early bird, you can't miss brilliant Venus rising in the east around 5 am. The crescent Moon forms a lovely sight with the Morning Star before dawn on 24 and 25 April.
5 April, 3.15am: First Quarter Moon near Mars
12 April: Moon near Spica
13 April, 1.22am: Full Moon near Spica
21 April, 2.35am: Last Quarter Moon; Mercury at greatest elongation west
24 April, before dawn: Moon near Venus
25 April, before dawn: Moon near Venus
30 April: Moon near Jupiter

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Ask Janice: 'I'm worried I might be pregnant - what do I do?'
During the Easter break, I had sex with four guys, and now I'm worried I might be pregnant. I knew three of them, but the other one was just a random. I can't eat or sleep for worrying that I might be pregnant and which one could be the dad. I can't speak to my parents as they would be furious, and that's putting it mildly. I'm not ready to be a mum and want to finish my college course, so what do I do? I feel like going out and getting wasted to blank all this out. Help. JJ. Dear JJ, Getting wasted was most likely what got you into this mess, so don't even think about it. You certainly made best use of the Easter break, and although I'm not here to judge, you need to consider the wider implications of your promiscuous behaviour. Apart from a potential unwanted pregnancy, your sexual health (and your partners') is at risk. Visit your GP and get a pregnancy test done immediately. If positive, your doctor can advise on your options and discuss a paternity test, if needed. Your doctor will also arrange for you to be tested for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). However, regardless of the outcome of these tests, you need to be supported emotionally, so please chat to a trusted friend or relative, as support and guidance are crucial at this time. It's also the perfect time to reflect on your behaviour which has resulted in such emotional turmoil. You have a career looming ahead, and in order to manage your life going forward, you must take responsibility for your actions. Bed-hopping with strangers is short-term gratification for long-term guilt and emotional baggage. It's also immature, unsafe, and a recipe for a lot of future unhappiness. I have no doubt you'll be fine if you clean up your act, stay safe, and learn the valuable lessons these last weeks should have taught you. Take care. Dear Janice, I work in a busy factory, and it seems like every week I am putting cash into envelopes for someone's birthday, new baby, wedding, or leaving do. I have never had a card or gift, and although that sounds childish, I really can't afford to spend my hard-earned money on people I barely know. I don't want them thinking I'm the only mean one if I don't want to contribute to everything. Nicole. Dear Nicole, You will not be the only person who begrudges paying into these endless envelopes because, like you, most people feel obligated to contribute in order to conform with their colleagues. Sure, it's a lovely gesture, but from now on agree that it makes more sense for everyone to contribute to a smaller group, i.e., people whom they work closely with on a regular basis. This means you won't constantly be spending on strangers but will enjoy giving to people who actually mean something to you. Got a question for our agony aunt? Email askjanice@


Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Jesus did have children with 'wife' Mary Magdalene 'lost Gospel' proves
A controversial manuscript that is nearly 1,500 years old claims that Jesus Christ was married to prostitute Mary Magdalene and the couple had two children - despite no historical accounts of the marriage A bombshell manuscript said to be nearly 1,500 years old has sparked fresh debate by suggesting Jesus Christ was wed to Mary Magdalene and the pair had children. Dubbed the "Lost Gospel", the document, which surfaced in the British Library, reveals these shocking claims after translation from Aramaic as reported by The Sunday Times. While many scholars have historically downplayed Mary Magdalene's role, translators of this text believe she held much more prominence. Professor Barrie Wilson and writer Simcha Jacobovic devoted months to translating the ancient text, concluding that it identifies the original Virgin Mary as Jesus's spouse rather than his mother and asserts they conceived two children. Mary Magdalene's presence is woven throughout traditional gospel narratives, witnessing key events in Jesus's life, but this "Lost Gospel" isn't the pioneer in proposing she was Jesus's wife, reports the Express. The audacious idea previously surfaced in Nikos Kazantzakis's 1953 novel "The Last Temptation of Christ" and was famously echoed by Dan Brown in his bestseller "The Da Vinci Code". Known from the four canonical gospels as a devout follower who journeyed with Jesus, Magdalene's story remains interlaced with his, her significance perhaps greater than ever imagined. She is also thought to have been present at his crucifixion and subsequently, his resurrection. She is named a dozen times in the canonical gospels - more than most of the apostles. It's widely acknowledged among secular historians that Mary Magdalene, like Jesus, was a real historical figure. She is also referred to more than any other woman in the gospels, apart from Jesus's family. Magdalene is recognised as a saint by several religions including the Catholic, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox and Lutheran churches. In 2016, Pope Francis elevated the level of liturgical memory on July 22 from memorial to feast, and declared her to be known as the "Apostle of the apostles". In some Protestant Churches, she is celebrated as a heroine of the faith, while the Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates her on the Sunday of the Myrrhbearers. During the Counter-Reformation in Roman Catholicism, the descriptor "penitent" was appended to her name on her feast day.


Reuters
4 days ago
- Reuters
UK supermarket Asda seeing 'green shoots' of recovery
LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - The boss of British supermarket Asda said he was seeing "green shoots" of recovery after the group slowed the rate of its sales decline in its first quarter, helped by lower prices and better product availability. Asda, Britain's third largest food retailer after Tesco (TSCO.L), opens new tab and Sainsbury's (SBRY.L), opens new tab, said like-for-like sales in the four months to April 30, adjusted to include Easter trading, declined by 3.1% - an improvement on the 4.2% fall in the previous quarter. Asda said it had seen further improvements in May. "Although we are seeing the green shoots in sales performance, there is a long way to go," executive chairman Allan Leighton said on Thursday. Private equity firm TDR Capital, Asda's majority owner, brought Leighton back to the grocer in November, more than two decades after he served as CEO and turned the chain around before selling it to Walmart (WMT.N), opens new tab. In March, Leighton warned his plan to be 5% to 10% cheaper than rivals would "materially reduce" profit. His comment hit the shares of Tesco and Sainsbury's on fears of a price war. Asda said it had cut the prices of about 10,000 products, more than a third of its range, establishing a price gap of 3% to 6% over its full-service supermarket rivals. It said product availability had increased from 90% to 95% since January, while customer satisfaction had also improved. "People who've been in the industry a long time are amazed at the progress that we've made on availability in a relatively short period of time," Leighton told reporters. Industry data published Wednesday showed Asda's sales fell 3.2% over the 12 weeks to May 18 year-on-year, with the group's market share down 90 basis points to 12.1%. Market researcher Kantar said it was, however, Asda's best performance since May 2024.