(WATCH LIVE STREAM IN THE VIDEO ABOVE AT 9PM EST JUNE 23) "Supermoon June 23 2013" will be peaking in the early morning hours both June 22 and June 23, so viewers could expect amazing shows in the sky on both days, according to NASA. However the moon is expected to reach its closest distance to the Earth at exactly 7:32 am EST on Sunday, the space agency advised.

[WATCH 'SUPERMOON JUNE 2013' LIVE STREAM HERE]

The Supermoon occurs when the moon is the biggest and the brightest of the year because it will be closer to the Earth than at any other time. A live stream of the extraordinary event will be broadcasting at the SLOOH Space Camera website (www.slooh.com) located at the Canary Islands. The site notes that in North America, the Supermoon live stream will kick off at 9 p.m. EST Sunday.

SLOOH will offer viewers of it's live stream a live chat with astronomer Bob Berman and the SLOOH team and different angles of the Supermoon as well as close-up looks that the surface of the moon.

"It doesn't matter where you are, the full moon you're seeing will be the biggest for 2013," Michelle Thaller, the assistant director of science at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said. "... That 12 percent size different can mean as much as a 30 percent change in the brightness, so this will be a particularly bright Supermoon."

[SLIDESHOW: SUPERMOON 2012 PHOTOS FROM AROUND THE WORLD]

According to NASA, June 2013's Supermoon will be up to 14 percent larger and 30 percent brighter than a typical Full Moon is because the moon will reach its perigree or the closest point to the Earth of its orbit.

In terms of distance, the Moon will be at nearly 222,000 miles away from the Earth compared to the 252, 581 miles away that it is at its furthest distance from the planet (apogee.)

The moon is expected to move fast and be at the farthest point to Earth on July 7, only two weeks from now.

According to NASA, the ocean tides might be slightly higher because of the effects on a Supermoon on Earth, but viewers should not worry about major effects.

"There should be no impact on anybody on the Earth," NASA's planetary geologist Noah Petro said on NASA TV. "There should be nothing unusual except maybe for more people staring up at the moon, which should be a wonderful thing."