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Lunar phase

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Lunar phase

A lunar phase or Moon phase is the apparent shape of the Moon's day and night phases of the lunar day as viewed from afar. Because the Moon is tidally locked to Earth, the cycle of phases takes one lunar month and moves across the same side of the Moon, which always faces Earth. In common usage, the four major phases are the new moon, the first quarter, the full moon and the last quarter; the four minor phases are waxing crescent, waxing gibbous, waning gibbous, and waning crescent. A lunar month is the time between successive recurrences of the same phase: due to the eccentricity of the Moon's orbit, this duration is not perfectly constant but averages about 29.5 days. The appearance of the Moon (its phase) gradually changes over a lunar month as the relative orbital positions of the Moon around Earth, and Earth around the Sun, shift. The visible side of the Moon is sunlit to varying extents, depending on the position of the Moon in its orbit, with the sunlit portion varying from 0% (at new moon) to nearly 100% (at full moon).

Tables

· Phases of the Moon › Principal and intermediate phases of the Moon
Northern Hemisphere
Northern Hemisphere
Moon phases
Northern Hemisphere
Moon phases
Southern Hemisphere
Illuminated portion
North Pole
Illuminated portion
South Pole
New Moon
New Moon
Moon phases
New Moon
Moon phases
Disc completely in shade (lit by earthshine only)
Illuminated portion
Invisible (too close to Sun), except during a total or annular solar eclipse(when the Moon obscures the Sun disc)
Illuminated portion
06:00
Visibility
12:00
Average moonrise time
18:00
Culmination time (highest point)
Average moonset time
Waxing moon
Waxing moon
Moon phases
Waxing moon
Moon phases
Waxing crescent
Illuminated portion
Right side: (1%–49%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Left side: (1%–49%) lit disc
Visibility
Late morning to post-dusk
Average moonrise time
09:00
Culmination time (highest point)
15:00
Average moonset time
21:00
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
First quarter
First quarter
Moon phases
First quarter
Moon phases
Right side: 50% lit disc
Illuminated portion
Left side: 50% lit disc
Illuminated portion
Afternoon and early night
Visibility
12:00
Average moonrise time
18:00
Culmination time (highest point)
00:00
Average moonset time
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
Waxing gibbous
Waxing gibbous
Moon phases
Waxing gibbous
Moon phases
Right side: (51%–99%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Left side: (51%–99%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Late afternoon and most of night
Visibility
15:00
Average moonrise time
21:00
Culmination time (highest point)
03:00
Average moonset time
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
Full Moon
Full Moon
Moon phases
Full Moon
Moon phases
100% illuminated disc, except during a total or partial lunar eclipse(when the Moon crosses the Earth's shadow)
Illuminated portion
Sunset to sunrise (all night)
Illuminated portion
18:00
Visibility
00:00
Average moonrise time
06:00
Culmination time (highest point)
Average moonset time
Waning moon
Waning moon
Moon phases
Waning moon
Moon phases
Waning gibbous
Illuminated portion
Left side: (99%–51%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Right side: (99%–51%) lit disc
Visibility
Most of night and early morning
Average moonrise time
21:00
Culmination time (highest point)
03:00
Average moonset time
09:00
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
Last quarter
Last quarter
Moon phases
Last quarter
Moon phases
Left side: 50% lit disc
Illuminated portion
Right side: 50% lit disc
Illuminated portion
Late night and morning
Visibility
00:00
Average moonrise time
06:00
Culmination time (highest point)
12:00
Average moonset time
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
Waning crescent
Waning crescent
Moon phases
Waning crescent
Moon phases
Left side: (49%–1%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Right side: (49%–1%) lit disc
Illuminated portion
Pre-dawn to early afternoon
Visibility
03:00
Average moonrise time
09:00
Culmination time (highest point)
15:00
Average moonset time
Illustrations from
Illustrations from
Moon phases
Illuminated portion
Visibility
Average moonrise time
Culmination time (highest point)
Average moonset time
Illustrations from
Photograph (view from the Northern Hemisphere)
Northern Hemisphere
Southern Hemisphere
North Pole
South Pole
New Moon
Disc completely in shade (lit by earthshine only)
Invisible (too close to Sun), except during a total or annular solar eclipse(when the Moon obscures the Sun disc)
06:00
12:00
18:00
Waxing moon
Waxing crescent
Right side: (1%–49%) lit disc
Left side: (1%–49%) lit disc
Late morning to post-dusk
09:00
15:00
21:00
First quarter
Right side: 50% lit disc
Left side: 50% lit disc
Afternoon and early night
12:00
18:00
00:00
Waxing gibbous
Right side: (51%–99%) lit disc
Left side: (51%–99%) lit disc
Late afternoon and most of night
15:00
21:00
03:00
Full Moon
100% illuminated disc, except during a total or partial lunar eclipse(when the Moon crosses the Earth's shadow)
Sunset to sunrise (all night)
18:00
00:00
06:00
Waning moon
Waning gibbous
Left side: (99%–51%) lit disc
Right side: (99%–51%) lit disc
Most of night and early morning
21:00
03:00
09:00
Last quarter
Left side: 50% lit disc
Right side: 50% lit disc
Late night and morning
00:00
06:00
12:00
Waning crescent
Left side: (49%–1%) lit disc
Right side: (49%–1%) lit disc
Pre-dawn to early afternoon
03:00
09:00
15:00

References

  1. The quarter phases happen when the observer–Moon–Sun angle is 90°[citation needed], also known as quadrature[dubious –
  2. Their durations vary slightly because the Moon's orbit is somewhat elliptical, so its orbital speed is not constant.
  3. As with sunrise and sunset, there are seasonal variations in the time of moonrise and moonset.
  4. Lunar months vary in length about the mean by up to seven hours in any given year. In 2001, the synodic months varied fr
  5. NBC News
    https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna4402294
  6. BBC Sky at Night Magazine
    https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/space-science/why-does-the-moons-appearance-change
  7. Seidelmann 1992, p. 478.
  8. Imiloa, Hilo Attractions
    https://web.archive.org/web/20140102085746/http://www.imiloahawaii.org/57
  9. "Free Astronomy Lesson 7 - The Phases of the Moon"
    http://www.synapses.co.uk/astro/moon2.html
  10. Dictionary.com
    https://www.dictionary.com/browse/gibbous
  11. Asmelash & Allan 2019.
  12. "Telling Time by the Light of the Moon"
    https://coe.hawaii.edu/ethnomath/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2019/10/Telling-Time-by-the-Light-of-the-Moon.pdf
  13. aa.usno.navy.mil
    https://web.archive.org/web/20180206063503/http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/moon_phases.php
  14. Seidelmann 1992, p. 577.
  15. astropixels.com
    http://astropixels.com/ephemeris/moon/synodicmonth2001.html
  16. "How, When And Where You Can Gaze At A 'New Moon In The Old Moon's Arms' This Week From Home"
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamiecartereurope/2021/04/08/how-when-and-where-you-can-gaze-at-a-new-moon-in-the-old-moons-arms-this-week-from-home/
  17. Australian Broadcasting Corporation
    https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2018-01-24/beginners-guide-to-the-moon/9320770
  18. Slate
    https://slate.com/technology/2012/12/full-moon-today-is-the-13th-full-moon-of-2012.html
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