There are several types of unusual full moon types including blood moons, supermoons, blue moons, and harvest moons, and others.
In 1979, an American astrologer Richard Nolle coined the term supermoon to describe both a new and a full moon occurring at or near perigee.
Supermoon is also known as perigee-syzygy Moon and is also spelled as Super Moon.
Mainly there are two reasons for the supermoon to occur namely when the moon is at its closest approach or perigee, to the Earth in its 27-day orbit and second is the moon need to be at the full phase that happens every 29.5 days when the sun fully illuminates the moon.
Super Pink Moon gets its name from the pink wildflowers called Wild Ground Phlox. They bloom in the spring season and are native to North America.
Once every 27.322 days, the moon orbits the earth. That is it takes approximately 27 days to rotate once on its axis.
Synodic month is the most familiar lunar cycle as it governs the well-known cycle of the Moon's phases. The mean length of the synodic month is 29.53059 days.
Harvest Moon term refers to the full, bright Moon that occurs closest to the autumn equinox.
As this full moon is the first full moon of the spring season, so-called as "Paschal Moon" that helps to set the date of Easter. The general rule is that the first Sunday after the occurrence of the Paschal Moon is designated as Easter.
A full moon occurs when the side of the Moon facing the Earth is fully lit up by the Sun and all full moons do not look the same.