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Lunar phase

A lunar phase or Moon phase is the apparent shape of the Moon's directly sunlit portion as viewed from the Earth (because the Moon is tidally locked with the Earth, the same hemisphere is always facing the 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 lunar phases and librations in 2024 as viewed from the Northern Hemisphere at hourly intervals, with titles and supplemental graphics
The lunar phases and librations in 2024 as viewed from the Southern Hemisphere at hourly intervals, with titles and supplemental graphics
A full moon sets behind San Gorgonio Mountain in California on a midsummer's morning.

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).[1]

Phases of the Moon edit

 
The phases of the Moon as viewed looking southward from the Northern Hemisphere. Each phase would be rotated 180° if seen looking northward from the Southern Hemisphere. The upper part of the diagram is not to scale, as the Moon, the Earth, and the Moon's orbit are all much smaller relative to the Earth's orbit than shown here.

There are four principal (primary, or major) lunar phases: the new moon, first quarter, full moon, and last quarter (also known as third or final quarter), when the Moon's ecliptic longitude is at an angle to the Sun (as viewed from the center of the Earth) of 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270° respectively.[2][a] Each of these phases appears at slightly different times at different locations on Earth, and tabulated times are therefore always geocentric (calculated for the Earth's center).

Between the principal phases are intermediate phases, during which the apparent shape of the illuminated Moon is either crescent or gibbous. On average, the intermediate phases last one-quarter of a synodic month, or 7.38 days.[b]

The term waxing is used for an intermediate phase when the Moon's apparent shape is thickening, from new to a full moon; and waning when the shape is thinning. The duration from full moon to new moon (or new moon to full moon) varies from approximately 13 days 22+12 hours to about 15 days 14+12 hours.

Due to lunar motion relative to the meridian and the ecliptic, in Earth's northern hemisphere:

  • A new moon appears highest at the summer solstice and lowest at the winter solstice.
  • A first-quarter moon appears highest at the spring equinox and lowest at the autumn equinox.
  • A full moon appears highest at the winter solstice and lowest at the summer solstice.
  • A last-quarter moon appears highest at the autumn equinox and lowest at the spring equinox.

Non-Western cultures may use a different number of lunar phases; for example, traditional Hawaiian culture has a total of 30 phases (one per day).[3]

Lunar libration edit

 
Animation showing progression of the Moon's phases.

As seen from Earth, the Moon's eccentric orbit makes it both slightly change its apparent size, and to be seen from slightly different angles. The effect is subtle to the naked eye, from night to night, yet somewhat obvious in time-lapse photography.

Lunar libration causes part of the back side of the Moon to be visible to a terrestrial observer some of the time. Because of this, around 59% of the Moon's surface has been imaged from the ground.

Principal and intermediate phases of the Moon edit

Moon phase Illuminated portion Visibility Average moonrise time[c] Culmination time (highest point) Average moonset time[c] Illustration Photograph (view from Northern Hemisphere)
Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere
New Moon
Disc completely in Sun's shadow (lit by earthshine only)
Invisible (too close to Sun) except during a solar eclipse 06:00 12:00 18:00
 
 
 
Waxing crescent Right side, (0%–50%) lit disc Left side, (0%–50%) lit disc Late morning to post-dusk 09:00 15:00 21:00
 
 
 
First quarter Right side, 50.1% lit disc Left side, 50.1% lit disc Afternoon and early night 12:00 18:00 00:00
 
 
 
Waxing gibbous Right side, (50%–100%) lit disc Left side, (50%–100%) lit disc Late afternoon and most of night 15:00 21:00 03:00
 
 
 
Full Moon
100% illuminated disc
Sunset to sunrise (all night) 18:00 00:00 06:00
 
 
 
Waning gibbous Left side, (100%–50%) lit disc Right side, (100%–50%) lit disc Most of night and early morning 21:00 03:00 09:00
 
 
 
Last quarter Left side, 50.1% lit disc Right side, 50.1% lit disc Late night and morning 00:00 06:00 12:00
 
 
 
Waning crescent Left side, (50%–0%) lit disc Right side, (50%–0%) lit disc Pre-dawn to early afternoon 03:00 09:00 15:00
 
 
 
This video provides an illustration of how the Moon passes through its phases – a product of its orbit, which allows different parts of its surface to be illuminated by the Sun over the course of a month. The camera is locked to the Moon as Earth rapidly rotates in the foreground.

Waxing and waning edit

 
Diagram of the Moon's phases: The Earth is at the center of the diagram and the Moon is shown orbiting.

When the Sun and Moon are aligned on the same side of the Earth (conjunct), the Moon is "new", and the side of the Moon facing Earth is not illuminated by the Sun. As the Moon waxes (the amount of illuminated surface as seen from Earth increases), the lunar phases progress through the new moon, crescent moon, first-quarter moon, gibbous moon, and full moon phases. The Moon then wanes as it passes through the gibbous moon, third-quarter moon, and crescent moon phases, before returning back to new moon.

The terms old moon and new moon are not interchangeable. The "old moon" is a waning sliver (which eventually becomes undetectable to the naked eye) until the moment it aligns with the Sun and begins to wax, at which point it becomes new again.[4] Half moon is often used to mean the first- and third-quarter moons, while the term quarter refers to the extent of the Moon's cycle around the Earth, not its shape.

When an illuminated hemisphere is viewed from a certain angle, the portion of the illuminated area that is visible will have a two-dimensional shape as defined by the intersection of an ellipse and circle (in which the ellipse's major axis coincides with the circle's diameter). If the half-ellipse is convex with respect to the half-circle, then the shape will be gibbous (bulging outwards),[5] whereas if the half-ellipse is concave with respect to the half-circle, then the shape will be a crescent. When a crescent moon occurs, the phenomenon of earthshine may be apparent, where the night side of the Moon dimly reflects indirect sunlight reflected from Earth.[6]

Orientation by latitude edit

 
The observed orientation of the Moon at different phases from different latitudes on Earth (the different orientation displayed between the phases at each latitude show merely the extremes of orientation due to libration)

In the Northern Hemisphere, if the left side of the Moon is dark, then the bright part is thickening, and the Moon is described as waxing (shifting toward full moon). If the right side of the Moon is dark, then the bright part is thinning, and the Moon is described as waning (past full and shifting toward new moon). Assuming that the viewer is in the Northern Hemisphere, the right side of the Moon is the part that is always waxing. (That is, if the right side is dark, the Moon is becoming darker; if the right side is lit, the Moon is getting brighter.)

In the Southern Hemisphere, the Moon is observed from a perspective inverted, or rotated 180°, to that of the Northern and to all of the images in this article, so that the opposite sides appear to wax or wane.

Closer to the Equator, the lunar terminator will appear horizontal during the morning and evening. Since the above descriptions of the lunar phases only apply at middle or high latitudes, observers moving towards the tropics from northern or southern latitudes will see the Moon rotated anti-clockwise or clockwise with respect to the images in this article.

The lunar crescent can open upward or downward, with the "horns" of the crescent pointing up or down, respectively. When the Sun appears above the Moon in the sky, the crescent opens downward; when the Moon is above the Sun, the crescent opens upward. The crescent Moon is most clearly and brightly visible when the Sun is below the horizon, which implies that the Moon must be above the Sun, and the crescent must open upward. This is therefore the orientation in which the crescent Moon is most often seen from the tropics. The waxing and waning crescents look very similar. The waxing crescent appears in the western sky in the evening, and the waning crescent in the eastern sky in the morning.

Earthshine edit

 
An overexposed photograph of a crescent Moon reveals earthshine and stars.

When the Moon (seen from Earth) is a thin crescent, Earth (as viewed from the Moon) is almost fully lit by the Sun. Often, the dark side of the Moon is dimly illuminated by indirect sunlight reflected from Earth, but is bright enough to be easily visible from Earth. This phenomenon is called earthshine, sometimes picturesquely described as "the old moon in the new moon's arms" or "the new moon in the old moon's arms".

Timekeeping edit

Archaeologists have reconstructed methods of timekeeping that go back to prehistoric times, at least as old as the Neolithic. The natural units for timekeeping used by most historical societies are the day, the solar year and the lunation. The first crescent of the new moon provides a clear and regular marker in time and pure lunar calendars (such as the Islamic Hijri calendar) rely completely on this metric. The fact, however, that a year of twelve lunar months is ten or eleven days shorter than the solar year means that a lunar calendar drifts out of step with the seasons. Lunisolar calendars resolve this issue with a year of thirteen lunar months every few years, or by restarting the count at the first new (or full) moon after the winter solstice. The Sumerian calendar is the first recorded to have used the former method; Chinese calendar uses the latter, despite delaying its start until the second or even third new moon after the solstice. The Hindu calendar, also a lunisolar calendar, further divides the month into two fourteen day periods that mark the waxing moon and the waning moon.

The ancient Roman calendar was broadly a lunisolar one; on the decree of Julius Caesar in the first century BCE, Rome changed to a solar calendar of twelve months, each of a fixed number of days except in a leap year. This, the Julian calendar (slightly revised in 1582 to correct the leap year rule), is the basis for the Gregorian calendar that is almost exclusively the civil calendar in use worldwide today.

Calculating phase edit

 
A crescent Moon over Kingman, Arizona

Each of the four intermediate phases lasts approximately seven days (7.38 days on average), but varies ±11.25% due to lunar apogee and perigee.

The number of days counted from the time of the new moon is the Moon's "age". Each complete cycle of phases is called a "lunation".[7]

The approximate age of the Moon, and hence the approximate phase, can be calculated for any date by calculating the number of days since a known new moon (such as 1 January 1900 or 11 August 1999) and reducing this modulo 29.53059 days (the mean length of a synodic month).[8][d] The difference between two dates can be calculated by subtracting the Julian day number of one from that of the other, or there are simpler formulae giving (for instance) the number of days since 31 December 1899. However, this calculation assumes a perfectly circular orbit and makes no allowance for the time of day at which the new moon occurred and therefore may be incorrect by several hours. (It also becomes less accurate the larger the difference between the required date and the reference date). It is accurate enough to use in a novelty clock application showing lunar phase, but specialist usage taking account of lunar apogee and perigee requires a more elaborate calculation.

Effect of parallax edit

The Earth subtends an angle of about two degrees when seen from the Moon. This means that an observer on Earth who sees the Moon when it is close to the eastern horizon sees it from an angle that is about 2 degrees different from the line of sight of an observer who sees the Moon on the western horizon. The Moon moves about 12 degrees around its orbit per day, so, if these observers were stationary, they would see the phases of the Moon at times that differ by about one-sixth of a day, or 4 hours. But in reality, the observers are on the surface of the rotating Earth, so someone who sees the Moon on the eastern horizon at one moment sees it on the western horizon about 12 hours later. This adds an oscillation to the apparent progression of the lunar phases. They appear to occur more slowly when the Moon is high in the sky than when it is below the horizon. The Moon appears to move jerkily, and the phases do the same. The amplitude of this oscillation is never more than about four hours, which is a small fraction of a month. It does not have any obvious effect on the appearance of the Moon. It does however affect accurate calculations of the times of lunar phases.

Misconceptions edit

Orbital period edit

It can be confusing that the Moon's orbital sidereal period is 27.3 days while the phases complete a cycle once every 29.5 days (synodic period). This is due to the Earth's orbit around the Sun. The Moon orbits the Earth 13.4 times a year, but only passes between the Earth and Sun 12.4 times.

Eclipses edit

 
As the Earth revolves around the Sun, approximate axial parallelism of the Moon's orbital plane (tilted five degrees to the Earth's orbital plane) results in the revolution of the lunar nodes relative to the Earth. This causes an eclipse season approximately every six months, in which a solar eclipse can occur at the new moon phase and a lunar eclipse can occur at the full moon phase.
The lunar phase depends on the Moon's position in orbit around the Earth and the Earth's position in orbit around the Sun. This animation (not to scale) looks down on Earth from the north pole of the ecliptic.

It might be expected that once every month, when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun during a new moon, its shadow would fall on Earth causing a solar eclipse, but this does not happen every month. Nor is it true that during every full moon, the Earth's shadow falls on the Moon, causing a lunar eclipse. Solar and lunar eclipses are not observed every month because the plane of the Moon's orbit around the Earth is tilted by about 5° with respect to the plane of Earth's orbit around the Sun (the plane of the ecliptic). Thus, when new and full moons occur, the Moon usually lies to the north or south of a direct line through the Earth and Sun. Although an eclipse can only occur when the Moon is either new (solar) or full (lunar), it must also be positioned very near the intersection of Earth's orbital plane about the Sun and the Moon's orbital plane about the Earth (that is, at one of its nodes). This happens about twice per year, and so there are between four and seven eclipses in a calendar year. Most of these eclipses are partial; total eclipses of the Moon or Sun are less frequent.

See also edit

  • Blue moon – Common name for one of the full moons in a year with 13 full moons
  • Earth phase – Phases of the Earth as seen from the Moon
  • Lunar effect – Unproven proposal of influence of lunar cycle on terrestrial creatures
  • Lunar month – Time between successive new moons. (Also known as a "lunation".)
  • Lunar observation – Methods and instruments used to observe the Moon
  • Planetary phase – Part of planet seen to reflect sunlight
  • Planetshine – Illumination by reflected sunlight from a planet
  • Tide – Rise and fall of the sea level under astronomical gravitational influences
  • Week – Time unit equal to seven days
  • Month – Unit of time about as long the orbital period of the Moon

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The quarter phases happen when the observer–Moon–Sun angle is 90°[citation needed], also known as quadrature[dubious ]. This is not the same as a right angle[dubious ], but the difference is very slight. /
  2. ^ Their durations vary slightly because the Moon's orbit is somewhat elliptical, so its orbital speed is not constant.
  3. ^ a b 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 from 29d 19h 14m in January to 29d 07h 11m in July.[9]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Is the 'full moon' merely a fallacy?". NBC News. 28 February 2004. Retrieved 2023-05-30.
  2. ^ Seidelmann 1992, p. 478.
  3. ^ . Imiloa, Hilo Attractions. Archived from the original on 2014-01-02. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  4. ^ "Free Astronomy Lesson 7 - The Phases of the Moon". from the original on 2023-04-14. Retrieved 2015-12-28.
  5. ^ "Gibbous Definition & Meaning". Dictionary.com. from the original on 2023-04-21. Origin of gibbous: 1350–1400; Middle English <Latin gibbōsus humped, equivalent to gibb(a) hump + -ōsus-ous
  6. ^ Asmelash & Allan 2019.
  7. ^ . aa.usno.navy.mil. Archived from the original on 2018-02-06. Retrieved 2018-02-12.
  8. ^ Seidelmann 1992, p. 577.
  9. ^ "Length of the Synodic Month: 2001 to 2100". astropixels.com. 8 November 2019.

Sources edit

  • Asmelash, Leah; Allan, David (30 July 2019). "A black moon is coming on July 31. Here's what that means". CNN.
  • Buick, Tony; Pugh, Philip (2011). How to Photograph the Moon and Planets with Your Digital Camera. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-5828-0.
  • Kelley, David H.; Milone, Eugene F. (2011). Exploring Ancient Skies: A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy (2nd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-7624-6.
  • Kutner, Marc L. (2003). Astronomy: A Physical Perspective. Cambridge University Press. p. 435. ISBN 978-0-521-52927-3.
  • Lynch, Mike. Texas Starwatch. Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-1-61060-511-3.
  • Naylor, John (2002). Out of the Blue: A 24-Hour Skywatcher's Guide. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-80925-2.
  • Ruggles, Clive L. N. (2005). Ancient Astronomy: An Encyclopedia of Cosmologies and Myth. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-477-6.
  • Seidelmann, P. Kenneth, ed. (1992). Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac. Mill Valley: University Science Books.

External links edit

  • Six Millennium Catalog of Phases of the Moon: Moon Phases from -1999 to +4000 (2000 BCE to 4000 CE).

lunar, phase, lunar, phase, moon, phase, apparent, shape, moon, directly, sunlit, portion, viewed, from, earth, because, moon, tidally, locked, with, earth, same, hemisphere, always, facing, earth, common, usage, four, major, phases, moon, first, quarter, full. A lunar phase or Moon phase is the apparent shape of the Moon s directly sunlit portion as viewed from the Earth because the Moon is tidally locked with the Earth the same hemisphere is always facing the 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 source source source source source source source source source source The lunar phases and librations in 2024 as viewed from the Northern Hemisphere at hourly intervals with titles and supplemental graphics source source source source source source source source source source The lunar phases and librations in 2024 as viewed from the Southern Hemisphere at hourly intervals with titles and supplemental graphicsA full moon sets behind San Gorgonio Mountain in California on a midsummer s morning 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 1 Contents 1 Phases of the Moon 2 Lunar libration 3 Principal and intermediate phases of the Moon 3 1 Waxing and waning 3 2 Orientation by latitude 3 3 Earthshine 4 Timekeeping 5 Calculating phase 6 Effect of parallax 7 Misconceptions 7 1 Orbital period 7 2 Eclipses 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksPhases of the Moon edit Waxing gibbous redirects here For the album see Waxing Gibbous nbsp The phases of the Moon as viewed looking southward from the Northern Hemisphere Each phase would be rotated 180 if seen looking northward from the Southern Hemisphere The upper part of the diagram is not to scale as the Moon the Earth and the Moon s orbit are all much smaller relative to the Earth s orbit than shown here There are four principal primary or major lunar phases the new moon first quarter full moon and last quarter also known as third or final quarter when the Moon s ecliptic longitude is at an angle to the Sun as viewed from the center of the Earth of 0 90 180 and 270 respectively 2 a Each of these phases appears at slightly different times at different locations on Earth and tabulated times are therefore always geocentric calculated for the Earth s center Between the principal phases are intermediate phases during which the apparent shape of the illuminated Moon is either crescent or gibbous On average the intermediate phases last one quarter of a synodic month or 7 38 days b The term waxing is used for an intermediate phase when the Moon s apparent shape is thickening from new to a full moon and waning when the shape is thinning The duration from full moon to new moon or new moon to full moon varies from approximately 13 days 22 1 2 hours to about 15 days 14 1 2 hours Due to lunar motion relative to the meridian and the ecliptic in Earth s northern hemisphere A new moon appears highest at the summer solstice and lowest at the winter solstice A first quarter moon appears highest at the spring equinox and lowest at the autumn equinox A full moon appears highest at the winter solstice and lowest at the summer solstice A last quarter moon appears highest at the autumn equinox and lowest at the spring equinox Non Western cultures may use a different number of lunar phases for example traditional Hawaiian culture has a total of 30 phases one per day 3 Lunar libration edit nbsp Animation showing progression of the Moon s phases As seen from Earth the Moon s eccentric orbit makes it both slightly change its apparent size and to be seen from slightly different angles The effect is subtle to the naked eye from night to night yet somewhat obvious in time lapse photography Lunar libration causes part of the back side of the Moon to be visible to a terrestrial observer some of the time Because of this around 59 of the Moon s surface has been imaged from the ground Principal and intermediate phases of the Moon editMoon phase Illuminated portion Visibility Average moonrise time c Culmination time highest point Average moonset time c Illustration Photograph view from Northern Hemisphere Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere Northern Hemisphere Southern HemisphereNew Moon Disc completely in Sun s shadow lit by earthshine only Invisible too close to Sun except during a solar eclipse 06 00 12 00 18 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Waxing crescent Right side 0 50 lit disc Left side 0 50 lit disc Late morning to post dusk 09 00 15 00 21 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp First quarter Right side 50 1 lit disc Left side 50 1 lit disc Afternoon and early night 12 00 18 00 00 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Waxing gibbous Right side 50 100 lit disc Left side 50 100 lit disc Late afternoon and most of night 15 00 21 00 03 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Full Moon 100 illuminated disc Sunset to sunrise all night 18 00 00 00 06 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Waning gibbous Left side 100 50 lit disc Right side 100 50 lit disc Most of night and early morning 21 00 03 00 09 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Last quarter Left side 50 1 lit disc Right side 50 1 lit disc Late night and morning 00 00 06 00 12 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp Waning crescent Left side 50 0 lit disc Right side 50 0 lit disc Pre dawn to early afternoon 03 00 09 00 15 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp source source source source source source source source source source This video provides an illustration of how the Moon passes through its phases a product of its orbit which allows different parts of its surface to be illuminated by the Sun over the course of a month The camera is locked to the Moon as Earth rapidly rotates in the foreground Waxing and waning edit nbsp Diagram of the Moon s phases The Earth is at the center of the diagram and the Moon is shown orbiting When the Sun and Moon are aligned on the same side of the Earth conjunct the Moon is new and the side of the Moon facing Earth is not illuminated by the Sun As the Moon waxes the amount of illuminated surface as seen from Earth increases the lunar phases progress through the new moon crescent moon first quarter moon gibbous moon and full moon phases The Moon then wanes as it passes through the gibbous moon third quarter moon and crescent moon phases before returning back to new moon The terms old moon and new moon are not interchangeable The old moon is a waning sliver which eventually becomes undetectable to the naked eye until the moment it aligns with the Sun and begins to wax at which point it becomes new again 4 Half moon is often used to mean the first and third quarter moons while the term quarter refers to the extent of the Moon s cycle around the Earth not its shape When an illuminated hemisphere is viewed from a certain angle the portion of the illuminated area that is visible will have a two dimensional shape as defined by the intersection of an ellipse and circle in which the ellipse s major axis coincides with the circle s diameter If the half ellipse is convex with respect to the half circle then the shape will be gibbous bulging outwards 5 whereas if the half ellipse is concave with respect to the half circle then the shape will be a crescent When a crescent moon occurs the phenomenon of earthshine may be apparent where the night side of the Moon dimly reflects indirect sunlight reflected from Earth 6 Orientation by latitude edit nbsp The observed orientation of the Moon at different phases from different latitudes on Earth the different orientation displayed between the phases at each latitude show merely the extremes of orientation due to libration In the Northern Hemisphere if the left side of the Moon is dark then the bright part is thickening and the Moon is described as waxing shifting toward full moon If the right side of the Moon is dark then the bright part is thinning and the Moon is described as waning past full and shifting toward new moon Assuming that the viewer is in the Northern Hemisphere the right side of the Moon is the part that is always waxing That is if the right side is dark the Moon is becoming darker if the right side is lit the Moon is getting brighter In the Southern Hemisphere the Moon is observed from a perspective inverted or rotated 180 to that of the Northern and to all of the images in this article so that the opposite sides appear to wax or wane Closer to the Equator the lunar terminator will appear horizontal during the morning and evening Since the above descriptions of the lunar phases only apply at middle or high latitudes observers moving towards the tropics from northern or southern latitudes will see the Moon rotated anti clockwise or clockwise with respect to the images in this article The lunar crescent can open upward or downward with the horns of the crescent pointing up or down respectively When the Sun appears above the Moon in the sky the crescent opens downward when the Moon is above the Sun the crescent opens upward The crescent Moon is most clearly and brightly visible when the Sun is below the horizon which implies that the Moon must be above the Sun and the crescent must open upward This is therefore the orientation in which the crescent Moon is most often seen from the tropics The waxing and waning crescents look very similar The waxing crescent appears in the western sky in the evening and the waning crescent in the eastern sky in the morning Earthshine edit nbsp An overexposed photograph of a crescent Moon reveals earthshine and stars Main article Earthlight astronomy When the Moon seen from Earth is a thin crescent Earth as viewed from the Moon is almost fully lit by the Sun Often the dark side of the Moon is dimly illuminated by indirect sunlight reflected from Earth but is bright enough to be easily visible from Earth This phenomenon is called earthshine sometimes picturesquely described as the old moon in the new moon s arms or the new moon in the old moon s arms Timekeeping editMain articles Lunar calendar Lunisolar calendar Metonic cycle Intercalation and History of calendars Archaeologists have reconstructed methods of timekeeping that go back to prehistoric times at least as old as the Neolithic The natural units for timekeeping used by most historical societies are the day the solar year and the lunation The first crescent of the new moon provides a clear and regular marker in time and pure lunar calendars such as the Islamic Hijri calendar rely completely on this metric The fact however that a year of twelve lunar months is ten or eleven days shorter than the solar year means that a lunar calendar drifts out of step with the seasons Lunisolar calendars resolve this issue with a year of thirteen lunar months every few years or by restarting the count at the first new or full moon after the winter solstice The Sumerian calendar is the first recorded to have used the former method Chinese calendar uses the latter despite delaying its start until the second or even third new moon after the solstice The Hindu calendar also a lunisolar calendar further divides the month into two fourteen day periods that mark the waxing moon and the waning moon The ancient Roman calendar was broadly a lunisolar one on the decree of Julius Caesar in the first century BCE Rome changed to a solar calendar of twelve months each of a fixed number of days except in a leap year This the Julian calendar slightly revised in 1582 to correct the leap year rule is the basis for the Gregorian calendar that is almost exclusively the civil calendar in use worldwide today Calculating phase edit nbsp A crescent Moon over Kingman ArizonaEach of the four intermediate phases lasts approximately seven days 7 38 days on average but varies 11 25 due to lunar apogee and perigee The number of days counted from the time of the new moon is the Moon s age Each complete cycle of phases is called a lunation 7 The approximate age of the Moon and hence the approximate phase can be calculated for any date by calculating the number of days since a known new moon such as 1 January 1900 or 11 August 1999 and reducing this modulo 29 53059 days the mean length of a synodic month 8 d The difference between two dates can be calculated by subtracting the Julian day number of one from that of the other or there are simpler formulae giving for instance the number of days since 31 December 1899 However this calculation assumes a perfectly circular orbit and makes no allowance for the time of day at which the new moon occurred and therefore may be incorrect by several hours It also becomes less accurate the larger the difference between the required date and the reference date It is accurate enough to use in a novelty clock application showing lunar phase but specialist usage taking account of lunar apogee and perigee requires a more elaborate calculation Effect of parallax editMain article Lunar parallax The Earth subtends an angle of about two degrees when seen from the Moon This means that an observer on Earth who sees the Moon when it is close to the eastern horizon sees it from an angle that is about 2 degrees different from the line of sight of an observer who sees the Moon on the western horizon The Moon moves about 12 degrees around its orbit per day so if these observers were stationary they would see the phases of the Moon at times that differ by about one sixth of a day or 4 hours But in reality the observers are on the surface of the rotating Earth so someone who sees the Moon on the eastern horizon at one moment sees it on the western horizon about 12 hours later This adds an oscillation to the apparent progression of the lunar phases They appear to occur more slowly when the Moon is high in the sky than when it is below the horizon The Moon appears to move jerkily and the phases do the same The amplitude of this oscillation is never more than about four hours which is a small fraction of a month It does not have any obvious effect on the appearance of the Moon It does however affect accurate calculations of the times of lunar phases Misconceptions editOrbital period edit It can be confusing that the Moon s orbital sidereal period is 27 3 days while the phases complete a cycle once every 29 5 days synodic period This is due to the Earth s orbit around the Sun The Moon orbits the Earth 13 4 times a year but only passes between the Earth and Sun 12 4 times Eclipses edit nbsp As the Earth revolves around the Sun approximate axial parallelism of the Moon s orbital plane tilted five degrees to the Earth s orbital plane results in the revolution of the lunar nodes relative to the Earth This causes an eclipse season approximately every six months in which a solar eclipse can occur at the new moon phase and a lunar eclipse can occur at the full moon phase source source source source source The lunar phase depends on the Moon s position in orbit around the Earth and the Earth s position in orbit around the Sun This animation not to scale looks down on Earth from the north pole of the ecliptic It might be expected that once every month when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun during a new moon its shadow would fall on Earth causing a solar eclipse but this does not happen every month Nor is it true that during every full moon the Earth s shadow falls on the Moon causing a lunar eclipse Solar and lunar eclipses are not observed every month because the plane of the Moon s orbit around the Earth is tilted by about 5 with respect to the plane of Earth s orbit around the Sun the plane of the ecliptic Thus when new and full moons occur the Moon usually lies to the north or south of a direct line through the Earth and Sun Although an eclipse can only occur when the Moon is either new solar or full lunar it must also be positioned very near the intersection of Earth s orbital plane about the Sun and the Moon s orbital plane about the Earth that is at one of its nodes This happens about twice per year and so there are between four and seven eclipses in a calendar year Most of these eclipses are partial total eclipses of the Moon or Sun are less frequent See also editBlue moon Common name for one of the full moons in a year with 13 full moons Earth phase Phases of the Earth as seen from the Moon Lunar effect Unproven proposal of influence of lunar cycle on terrestrial creatures Lunar month Time between successive new moons Also known as a lunation Lunar observation Methods and instruments used to observe the Moon Planetary phase Part of planet seen to reflect sunlight Planetshine Illumination by reflected sunlight from a planet Tide Rise and fall of the sea level under astronomical gravitational influences Week Time unit equal to seven days Month Unit of time about as long the orbital period of the MoonFootnotes edit The quarter phases happen when the observer Moon Sun angle is 90 citation needed also known as quadrature dubious discuss This is not the same as a right angle dubious discuss but the difference is very slight Their durations vary slightly because the Moon s orbit is somewhat elliptical so its orbital speed is not constant a b As with sunrise and sunset there are seasonal variations in the time of moonrise and moonset Lunar months vary in length about the mean by up to seven hours in any given year In 2001 the synodic months varied from 29d 19h 14m in January to 29d 07h 11m in July 9 References editCitations edit Is the full moon merely a fallacy NBC News 28 February 2004 Retrieved 2023 05 30 Seidelmann 1992 p 478 Hawaiian Moon Names Imiloa Hilo Attractions Archived from the original on 2014 01 02 Retrieved 2013 07 08 Free Astronomy Lesson 7 The Phases of the Moon Archived from the original on 2023 04 14 Retrieved 2015 12 28 Gibbous Definition amp Meaning Dictionary com Archived from the original on 2023 04 21 Origin of gibbous 1350 1400 Middle English lt Latin gibbōsus humped equivalent to gibb a hump ōsus ous Asmelash amp Allan 2019 Phases of the Moon and Percent of the Moon Illuminated aa usno navy mil Archived from the original on 2018 02 06 Retrieved 2018 02 12 Seidelmann 1992 p 577 Length of the Synodic Month 2001 to 2100 astropixels com 8 November 2019 Sources edit Asmelash Leah Allan David 30 July 2019 A black moon is coming on July 31 Here s what that means CNN Buick Tony Pugh Philip 2011 How to Photograph the Moon and Planets with Your Digital Camera Springer ISBN 978 1 4419 5828 0 Kelley David H Milone Eugene F 2011 Exploring Ancient Skies A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy 2nd ed Springer ISBN 978 1 4419 7624 6 Kutner Marc L 2003 Astronomy A Physical Perspective Cambridge University Press p 435 ISBN 978 0 521 52927 3 Lynch Mike Texas Starwatch Voyageur Press ISBN 978 1 61060 511 3 Naylor John 2002 Out of the Blue A 24 Hour Skywatcher s Guide Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80925 2 Ruggles Clive L N 2005 Ancient Astronomy An Encyclopedia of Cosmologies and Myth ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 477 6 Seidelmann P Kenneth ed 1992 Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac Mill Valley University Science Books External links editSix Millennium Catalog of Phases of the Moon Moon Phases from 1999 to 4000 2000 BCE to 4000 CE nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lunar phases Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lunar phase amp oldid 1197828844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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