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New moon


In astronomy, the new moon is the first lunar phase, when the Moon and Sun have the same ecliptic longitude.[2] At this phase, the lunar disk is not visible to the naked eye, except when it is silhouetted against the Sun during a solar eclipse.

A simulated image of the traditionally defined new Moon: the earliest visible waxing crescent (lower right), which signals the start of a new month in many lunar and lunisolar calendars.[1] At new moon, mostly earthlight illuminates the near side of the Moon.[a]
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.

The original meaning of the term 'new moon', which is still sometimes used in calendrical, non-astronomical contexts, is the first visible crescent of the Moon after conjunction with the Sun.[3] This thin waxing crescent is briefly and faintly visible as the Moon gets lower in the western sky after sunset. The precise time and even the date of the appearance of the new moon by this definition will be influenced by the geographical location of the observer. The first crescent marks the beginning of the month in the Islamic calendar[4] and in some lunisolar calendars such as the Hebrew calendar. In the Chinese calendar, the beginning of the month is marked by the last visible crescent of a waning Moon.

The astronomical new moon occurs by definition at the moment of conjunction in ecliptical longitude with the Sun when the Moon is invisible from the Earth. This moment is unique and does not depend on location, and in certain circumstances, it coincides with a solar eclipse.

A lunation, or synodic month, is the time period from one new moon to the next. At the J2000.0 epoch, the average length of a lunation is 29.53059 days (or 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, and 3 seconds).[5] However, the length of any one synodic month can vary from 29.26 to 29.80 days (12.96 hours) due to the perturbing effects of the Sun's gravity on the Moon's eccentric orbit.[6]

Lunation number

The Lunation Number or Lunation Cycle is a number given to each lunation beginning from a certain one in history. Several conventions are in use.[7]

The most commonly used was the Brown Lunation Number (BLN), which defines lunation 1 as beginning at the first new moon of 1923, the year when Ernest William Brown's lunar theory was introduced in the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac.[citation needed] Lunation 1 occurred at approximately 02:41 UTC, January 17, 1923. With later refinements, the BLN was used in almanacs until 1983.[8]

A more recent lunation number (simply called the Lunation Number) was introduced by Jean Meeus in 1998.[9] defines lunation 0 as beginning on the first new moon of 2000 (this occurred at approximately 18:14 UTC, January 6, 2000). The formula relating Meeus's Lunation Number with the Brown Lunation Number is: BLN = LN + 953.

The Goldstine Lunation Number refers to the lunation numbering used by Herman Goldstine,[10] with lunation 0 beginning on January 11, 1001 BCE, and can be calculated using GLN = LN + 37105.

The Hebrew Lunation Number is the count of lunations in the Hebrew calendar with lunation 1 beginning on October 6, 3761 BCE.[11] It can be calculated using HLN = LN + 71234.

The Islamic Lunation Number is the count of lunations in the Islamic Calendar with lunation 1 as beginning on the first day of the month of Muharram, which occurred in 622 CE (July 15, Julian, in the proleptic reckoning).[12] It can be calculated using ILN = LN + 17038.

The Thai Lunation Number is called "มาสเกณฑ์" (Maasa-Kendha), defines lunation 0 as the beginning of Burmese era of the Buddhist calendar on Sunday, March 22, 638 CE.[citation needed] It can be calculated using TLN = LN + 16843.

Lunisolar calendars

Hebrew calendar

The new moon, in Hebrew Rosh Chodesh, signifies the start of every Hebrew month and is considered an important date and minor holiday in the Hebrew calendar. The modern form of the calendar practiced in Judaism is a rule-based lunisolar calendar, akin to the Chinese calendar, measuring months defined in lunar cycles as well as years measured in solar cycles, and distinct from the purely lunar Islamic calendar and the predominantly solar Gregorian calendar. The Jewish months are fixed to the annual seasons by setting the new moon of Aviv, the barley ripening, or spring, as the first moon and head of the year.[13] Since the Babylonian captivity, this month is called Nisan, and it is calculated based on mathematical rules designed to ensure that festivals are observed in their traditional season. Passover always falls in the springtime.[14] This fixed lunisolar calendar follows rules introduced by Hillel II and refined until the ninth century This calculation makes use of a mean lunation length used by Ptolemy and handed down from Babylonians, which is still very accurate: ca. 29.530594 days vs. a present value (see below) of 29.530589 days. This difference of only 0.000005, or five-millionths of a day, adds up to about only four hours since Babylonian times.[citation needed]

The messianic Pentecostal group, the New Israelites of Peru, keeps the new moon as a Sabbath of rest. As an evangelical church, it follows the Bible's teachings that God sanctified the seventh-day Sabbath, and the new moons in addition to it.[15] No work may be done from dusk until dusk, and the services run for 11 hours, although a large number spend 24 hours within the gates of the temples, sleeping and singing praises throughout the night.[16]

Chinese calendar

The new moon is the beginning of the month in the Chinese calendar. Some Buddhist Chinese keep a vegetarian diet on the new moon and full moon each month.[17]

Hindu calendar

 
Amavasya and Prathama tithi

The new moon is significant in the lunar Hindu calendar. The first day of the calendar starts the day after the dark moon phase (Amavasya).[18]

There are fifteen moon dates for each of the waxing and waning periods. These fifteen dates are divided evenly into five categories: Nanda, Bhadra', Jaya, Rikta, and Purna, which are cycled through in that order.[19] Nanda dates are considered to be favorable for auspicious works; Bhadra dates for works related to community, social, family, and friends; and Jaya dates for dealing with conflict. Rikta dates are considered beneficial only for works related to cruelty. Purna dates are considered to be favorable for all work.[19]: 25 

Babylonian calendar

Lunar calendars

Islamic calendar

The lunar Hijri calendar has exactly 12 lunar months in a year of 354 or 355 days.[20] It has retained an observational definition of the new moon, marking the new month when the first crescent moon is seen, and making it impossible to be certain in advance of when a specific month will begin (in particular, the exact date on which the month of Ramadan will begin is not known in advance). In Saudi Arabia, the new King Abdullah Centre for Crescent Observations and Astronomy in Mecca has a clock for addressing this as an international scientific project.[citation needed] In Pakistan, there is a "Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee" whose head is Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rehman, assisted by 150 observatories of the Pakistan Meteorological Department, which announces the sighting of the new moon.[21]

An attempt to unify Muslims on a scientifically calculated worldwide calendar was adopted by both the Fiqh Council of North America and the European Council for Fatwa and Research in 2007. The new calculation requires that conjunction must occur before sunset in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, and that, on the same evening, moonset must take place after sunset. These can be precisely calculated and therefore a unified calendar is possible should it become adopted worldwide.[22][23]

Solar calendars holding moveable feasts

Baháʼí calendar

The Baháʼí calendar is a solar calendar with certain new moons observed as moveable feasts. In the Baháʼí Faith, effective from 2015 onwards, the "Twin Holy Birthdays", refer to two successive holy days in the Baháʼí calendar (the birth of the Báb and the birth of Bahá'u'lláh), will be observed on the first and the second day following the occurrence of the eighth new moon after Naw-Rúz (Baháʼí New Year), as determined in advance by astronomical tables using Tehran as the point of reference.[24] This will result in the observance of the Twin Birthdays moving, year to year, from mid-October to mid-November according to the Gregorian calendar.[25]

Christian liturgical calendar

Easter, the most important feast in the Christian liturgical calendar, is a movable feast. The date of Easter is determined by reference to the ecclesiastical full moon, which, being historically difficult to determine with precision, is defined as being fourteen days after the (first crescent) new moon.[26][27]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Planetlight, zodiacal light, and starlight contribute a negligible amount of the total light that the lunar surface reflects.

References

  1. ^ "New Moon". Flickr. NASA/GSFC. 15 June 2011.
  2. ^ Meeus 1991, p. 319.
  3. ^ "new moon". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  4. ^ Islamic Crescents' Observation Project, Visibility of Muharram Crescent 1432 AH 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine; seen on 6 December in Algeria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, South Africa.
  5. ^ Seidelmann 1992, p. 576.
  6. ^ Espenak, Fred. "Eclipses and the Moon's Orbit". NASA Eclipse Web Site. NASA. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  7. ^ "Lunation number in ScienceWorld".
  8. ^ Chapront-Touzé, M; Chapront, J (2002). "Analytical Ephemerides of the Moon in the 20th Century" (PDF). Observatoire de Paris. pp. 21–22.
  9. ^ Meeus, Jean (1998). Astronomical algorithms (2nd ed.). Richmond, Va. ISBN 9780943396613. OCLC 40521322.
  10. ^ Goldstine, Herman (1973). New and Full Moons: 1001 B.C. to A.D. 1651. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. ISBN 9780871690944. OCLC 609368.
  11. ^ Hebrew Calendar Calculator
  12. ^ Mohammad Ilyas, "Hijrah Day Number, Islamic Day Number and Islamic Lunation Number: New parameters for exacting the Islamic calendar", Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 101 (1991), 175–176 ADS link.
  13. ^ Exodus 12:1–2
  14. ^ Posner, Menachem (2016). "How Does the Spring Equinox Relate to the Timing of Passover?". Chabad. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  15. ^ Ezekiel 46:1, 3
  16. ^ AEMINPU ESPAÑA. "Luna Nueva Bíblica". israelcongregaciondejehova.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-04-18.
  17. ^ "A Buddhist Perspective on Fasting". urbandharma.org. Retrieved 2016-09-18.
  18. ^ Long, Jeffery D. (9 September 2011). Historical Dictionary of Hinduism. Scarecrow Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-8108-7960-7.
  19. ^ a b Wilhelm, Ernst (2003). Classical Muhurta. Kala Occult Publishers. pp. 23–25. ISBN 978-0-9709636-2-8. Retrieved 4 June 2022.
  20. ^ Seidelmann 1992, pp. 577.
  21. ^ "Senate body decides to draft Ruet-e-Hilal Constitution".
  22. ^ Fiqh Council of North America Decision: "Astronomical Calculations and Ramadan 2010-08-28 at the Wayback Machine"
  23. ^ Islamic Society of North America Decision:"Revised ISNA Ramadan and Eid Announcement 2007-11-11 at the Wayback Machine"
  24. ^ Momen, Moojan (2014). The Badí` (Baháʼí) Calendar: An Introduction.
  25. ^ The Universal House of Justice (2014-07-10). "To the Baháʼís of the World". Retrieved 2015-01-01.
  26. ^ Mosshammer 2008, p. 76: "Theoretically, the epact 30=0 represents the new moon in its conjunction with the sun. The epact of 1 represents the theoretical first visibility of the first crescent of the moon. It is from that point as day one that the fourteenth day of the moon is counted."
  27. ^ Dershowitz & Reingold 2008, pp. 114–115.

Works cited

External links

moon, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, cl. For other uses see New moon disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources New moon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In astronomy the new moon is the first lunar phase when the Moon and Sun have the same ecliptic longitude 2 At this phase the lunar disk is not visible to the naked eye except when it is silhouetted against the Sun during a solar eclipse A simulated image of the traditionally defined new Moon the earliest visible waxing crescent lower right which signals the start of a new month in many lunar and lunisolar calendars 1 At new moon mostly earthlight illuminates the near side of the Moon a 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 The original meaning of the term new moon which is still sometimes used in calendrical non astronomical contexts is the first visible crescent of the Moon after conjunction with the Sun 3 This thin waxing crescent is briefly and faintly visible as the Moon gets lower in the western sky after sunset The precise time and even the date of the appearance of the new moon by this definition will be influenced by the geographical location of the observer The first crescent marks the beginning of the month in the Islamic calendar 4 and in some lunisolar calendars such as the Hebrew calendar In the Chinese calendar the beginning of the month is marked by the last visible crescent of a waning Moon The astronomical new moon occurs by definition at the moment of conjunction in ecliptical longitude with the Sun when the Moon is invisible from the Earth This moment is unique and does not depend on location and in certain circumstances it coincides with a solar eclipse A lunation or synodic month is the time period from one new moon to the next At the J2000 0 epoch the average length of a lunation is 29 53059 days or 29 days 12 hours 44 minutes and 3 seconds 5 However the length of any one synodic month can vary from 29 26 to 29 80 days 12 96 hours due to the perturbing effects of the Sun s gravity on the Moon s eccentric orbit 6 Contents 1 Lunation number 2 Lunisolar calendars 2 1 Hebrew calendar 2 2 Chinese calendar 2 3 Hindu calendar 2 4 Babylonian calendar 3 Lunar calendars 3 1 Islamic calendar 4 Solar calendars holding moveable feasts 4 1 Bahaʼi calendar 4 2 Christian liturgical calendar 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Works cited 8 External linksLunation number EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Lunation Number or Lunation Cycle is a number given to each lunation beginning from a certain one in history Several conventions are in use 7 The most commonly used was the Brown Lunation Number BLN which defines lunation 1 as beginning at the first new moon of 1923 the year when Ernest William Brown s lunar theory was introduced in the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac citation needed Lunation 1 occurred at approximately 02 41 UTC January 17 1923 With later refinements the BLN was used in almanacs until 1983 8 A more recent lunation number simply called the Lunation Number was introduced by Jean Meeus in 1998 9 defines lunation 0 as beginning on the first new moon of 2000 this occurred at approximately 18 14 UTC January 6 2000 The formula relating Meeus s Lunation Number with the Brown Lunation Number is BLN LN 953 The Goldstine Lunation Number refers to the lunation numbering used by Herman Goldstine 10 with lunation 0 beginning on January 11 1001 BCE and can be calculated using GLN LN 37105 The Hebrew Lunation Number is the count of lunations in the Hebrew calendar with lunation 1 beginning on October 6 3761 BCE 11 It can be calculated using HLN LN 71234 The Islamic Lunation Number is the count of lunations in the Islamic Calendar with lunation 1 as beginning on the first day of the month of Muharram which occurred in 622 CE July 15 Julian in the proleptic reckoning 12 It can be calculated using ILN LN 17038 The Thai Lunation Number is called maseknth Maasa Kendha defines lunation 0 as the beginning of Burmese era of the Buddhist calendar on Sunday March 22 638 CE citation needed It can be calculated using TLN LN 16843 Lunisolar calendars EditSee also Lunisolar calendar Hebrew calendar Edit The new moon in Hebrew Rosh Chodesh signifies the start of every Hebrew month and is considered an important date and minor holiday in the Hebrew calendar The modern form of the calendar practiced in Judaism is a rule based lunisolar calendar akin to the Chinese calendar measuring months defined in lunar cycles as well as years measured in solar cycles and distinct from the purely lunar Islamic calendar and the predominantly solar Gregorian calendar The Jewish months are fixed to the annual seasons by setting the new moon of Aviv the barley ripening or spring as the first moon and head of the year 13 Since the Babylonian captivity this month is called Nisan and it is calculated based on mathematical rules designed to ensure that festivals are observed in their traditional season Passover always falls in the springtime 14 This fixed lunisolar calendar follows rules introduced by Hillel II and refined until the ninth century This calculation makes use of a mean lunation length used by Ptolemy and handed down from Babylonians which is still very accurate ca 29 530594 days vs a present value see below of 29 530589 days This difference of only 0 000005 or five millionths of a day adds up to about only four hours since Babylonian times citation needed The messianic Pentecostal group the New Israelites of Peru keeps the new moon as a Sabbath of rest As an evangelical church it follows the Bible s teachings that God sanctified the seventh day Sabbath and the new moons in addition to it 15 No work may be done from dusk until dusk and the services run for 11 hours although a large number spend 24 hours within the gates of the temples sleeping and singing praises throughout the night 16 Chinese calendar Edit The new moon is the beginning of the month in the Chinese calendar Some Buddhist Chinese keep a vegetarian diet on the new moon and full moon each month 17 Hindu calendar Edit Amavasya and Prathama tithi The new moon is significant in the lunar Hindu calendar The first day of the calendar starts the day after the dark moon phase Amavasya 18 There are fifteen moon dates for each of the waxing and waning periods These fifteen dates are divided evenly into five categories Nanda Bhadra Jaya Rikta and Purna which are cycled through in that order 19 Nanda dates are considered to be favorable for auspicious works Bhadra dates for works related to community social family and friends and Jaya dates for dealing with conflict Rikta dates are considered beneficial only for works related to cruelty Purna dates are considered to be favorable for all work 19 25 Babylonian calendar Edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it March 2021 Lunar calendars EditMain article Lunar calendar Islamic calendar Edit See also Solar Hijri calendar and Tabular Islamic calendar The lunar Hijri calendar has exactly 12 lunar months in a year of 354 or 355 days 20 It has retained an observational definition of the new moon marking the new month when the first crescent moon is seen and making it impossible to be certain in advance of when a specific month will begin in particular the exact date on which the month of Ramadan will begin is not known in advance In Saudi Arabia the new King Abdullah Centre for Crescent Observations and Astronomy in Mecca has a clock for addressing this as an international scientific project citation needed In Pakistan there is a Central Ruet e Hilal Committee whose head is Mufti Muneeb ur Rehman assisted by 150 observatories of the Pakistan Meteorological Department which announces the sighting of the new moon 21 An attempt to unify Muslims on a scientifically calculated worldwide calendar was adopted by both the Fiqh Council of North America and the European Council for Fatwa and Research in 2007 The new calculation requires that conjunction must occur before sunset in Mecca Saudi Arabia and that on the same evening moonset must take place after sunset These can be precisely calculated and therefore a unified calendar is possible should it become adopted worldwide 22 23 Solar calendars holding moveable feasts EditBahaʼi calendar Edit The Bahaʼi calendar is a solar calendar with certain new moons observed as moveable feasts In the Bahaʼi Faith effective from 2015 onwards the Twin Holy Birthdays refer to two successive holy days in the Bahaʼi calendar the birth of the Bab and the birth of Baha u llah will be observed on the first and the second day following the occurrence of the eighth new moon after Naw Ruz Bahaʼi New Year as determined in advance by astronomical tables using Tehran as the point of reference 24 This will result in the observance of the Twin Birthdays moving year to year from mid October to mid November according to the Gregorian calendar 25 Christian liturgical calendar Edit Easter the most important feast in the Christian liturgical calendar is a movable feast The date of Easter is determined by reference to the ecclesiastical full moon which being historically difficult to determine with precision is defined as being fourteen days after the first crescent new moon 26 27 See also Edit Solar System portalBlack moon Blue moon Dark moon Hebrew calendar Hilal Islamic New Year Islamic or Hejri calendar Lilith hypothetical moon Lunar calendar Lunar phase Lunisolar calendar Occultation Occultations by the Moon Solar eclipse Wet moonNotes Edit Planetlight zodiacal light and starlight contribute a negligible amount of the total light that the lunar surface reflects References Edit New Moon Flickr NASA GSFC 15 June 2011 Meeus 1991 p 319 new moon Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Islamic Crescents Observation Project Visibility of Muharram Crescent 1432 AH Archived 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine seen on 6 December in Algeria Iran Saudi Arabia South Africa Seidelmann 1992 p 576 Espenak Fred Eclipses and the Moon s Orbit NASA Eclipse Web Site NASA Retrieved 11 December 2016 Lunation number in ScienceWorld Chapront Touze M Chapront J 2002 Analytical Ephemerides of the Moon in the 20th Century PDF Observatoire de Paris pp 21 22 Meeus Jean 1998 Astronomical algorithms 2nd ed Richmond Va ISBN 9780943396613 OCLC 40521322 Goldstine Herman 1973 New and Full Moons 1001 B C to A D 1651 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society ISBN 9780871690944 OCLC 609368 Hebrew Calendar Calculator Mohammad Ilyas Hijrah Day Number Islamic Day Number and Islamic Lunation Number New parameters for exacting the Islamic calendar Journal of the British Astronomical Association 101 1991 175 176 ADS link Exodus 12 1 2 Posner Menachem 2016 How Does the Spring Equinox Relate to the Timing of Passover Chabad Retrieved 9 December 2016 Ezekiel 46 1 3 AEMINPU ESPANA Luna Nueva Biblica israelcongregaciondejehova com in Spanish Retrieved 2019 04 18 A Buddhist Perspective on Fasting urbandharma org Retrieved 2016 09 18 Long Jeffery D 9 September 2011 Historical Dictionary of Hinduism Scarecrow Press pp 76 77 ISBN 978 0 8108 7960 7 a b Wilhelm Ernst 2003 Classical Muhurta Kala Occult Publishers pp 23 25 ISBN 978 0 9709636 2 8 Retrieved 4 June 2022 Seidelmann 1992 pp 577 Senate body decides to draft Ruet e Hilal Constitution Fiqh Council of North America Decision Astronomical Calculations and Ramadan Archived 2010 08 28 at the Wayback Machine Islamic Society of North America Decision Revised ISNA Ramadan and Eid Announcement Archived 2007 11 11 at the Wayback Machine Momen Moojan 2014 The Badi Bahaʼi Calendar An Introduction The Universal House of Justice 2014 07 10 To the Bahaʼis of the World Retrieved 2015 01 01 Mosshammer 2008 p 76 Theoretically the epact 30 0 represents the new moon in its conjunction with the sun The epact of 1 represents the theoretical first visibility of the first crescent of the moon It is from that point as day one that the fourteenth day of the moon is counted Dershowitz amp Reingold 2008 pp 114 115 Works cited Edit Dershowitz Nachum Reingold Edward M 2008 Calendrical Calculations Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88540 9 Meeus Jean 1991 Astronomical Algorithms Willmann Bell ISBN 978 0 943396 35 4 Mosshammer Alden A 2008 The Easter Computus and the Origins of the Christian Era Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954312 0 Seidelmann P Kenneth ed 1992 Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac University Science Books ISBN 978 0 935702 68 2 External links EditMoon Watch site of the Nautical Almanac Office Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New moon amp oldid 1131579905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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