A pink supermoon is set to brighten the night skies over the UK next week, though there will not be any noticeable difference in colour, as the name might suggest.

The full moon in April is also known as the “pink moon” and is expected to take place just before sunset on Tuesday (April 27).

The celestial event is named after pink flowers, known as phlox, which bloom in the springtime – and there will not be noticeable difference in colour as the name might suggest.

It is also a supermoon because the full moon will occur when it is near its closest point to the Earth in its orbit.

During this time, the moon will still appear around 14 per cent bigger and 30 per cent brighter.

Anna Ross, an astronomer at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, told the PA news agency: “The average distance of the moon from the Earth is 384,400km, but the moon will reach its closest point this lunar month on April 27 at 16:24, when it will be 357,379 km away.

“The exact moment of the full moon closest to this point – so the supermoon – is also on April 27, but at 04:31.

“This means that the best times to view this supermoon will be anytime during the night of April 27 – when the moon will rise in the east just before sunset and set in the west around sunrise.”

The next supermoon will be visible in May 2021.