What is a full moon?


Full moon next to a large Christmas-lighted tower.

John Jairu Lumbera Roldan caught the full moon on December 11-12, 2019 and wrote: “The last full moon of this decade. Love, from the Philippines.” Back at you, John!

The moon appears full to the eye for two to three nights. However, astronomers regard the moon as full at a precisely defined instant, when the moon is exactly 180 degrees opposite the sun in ecliptic longitude.

Read more: Full Wolf Moon eclipse on January 10

Read more: What are the full moon names?

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Full moon reflecting in a bay, with a very small couple embracing in the lower left corner.

A kiss under the full moon of November 3, 2017, via our friend Steven Sweet of Lunar 101-Moon Book. He was at Port Credit, a neighborhood in the city of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada … at the mouth of the Credit River on the north shore of Lake Ontario.

Why does a full moon look full? Remember that half the moon is always illuminated by the sun. That lighted half is the moon’s day side. In order to appear full to us on Earth, we have to see the entire day side of the moon. That happens only when the moon is opposite the sun in our sky. So a full moon looks full because it’s opposite the sun.

That’s also why every full moon rises in the east around sunset – climbs highest up for the night midway between sunset and sunrise (around midnight) – and sets around sunrise. Stand outside tonight around sunset and look for the moon. Sun going down while the moon is coming up? That’s a full moon, or close to one.

Just be aware that the moon will look full for at least a couple of night around the instant of full moon.

Diagram showing a full moon on the opposite side of Earth from the sun.

A full moon is opposite the sun. We see all of its dayside. Illustration via Bob King.

Often, you’ll find two different dates on calendars for the date of full moon. That’s because some calendars list moon phases in Coordinated Universal Time, also called Universal Time Coordinated (UTC). And other calendars list moon phases in local time, a clock time of a specific place, usually the place that made and distributed the calendars. Translate UTC to your local time.

Want to know the instant of full moon in your part of the world, as well as the moonrise and moonset times? Visit Sunrise Sunset Calendars, remembering to check the moon phases plus moonrise and moonset boxes.

If a full moon is opposite the sun, why doesn’t Earth’s shadow fall on the moon at every full moon? The reason is that the moon’s orbit is tilted by 5.1 degrees with respect to Earth’s orbit around the sun. At every full moon, Earth’s shadow sweeps near the moon. But, in most months, there’s no eclipse.

Oblique diagram of earth, sun, moon orbits. Moon orbit slightly slanted in relation to Earth's.

A full moon normally passes above or below Earth’s shadow, with no eclipse. Illustration by Bob King.

As the moon orbits Earth, it changes phase in an orderly way. Follow these links to understand the various phases of the moon.

New moon
Waxing crescent moon
First quarter moon
Waxing gibbous moon
Full moon
Waning gibbous moon
Last quarter moon
Waning crescent moon

EarthSky lunar calendars show the phases of the moon throughout 2020. They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Bottom line: Full moon happens when the moon is most opposite the sun for any given month. The next full moon is January 10 at 19:21 UTC. Translate UTC to your time).

Read more: 4 keys to understanding moon phases



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2CEamRl
Full moon next to a large Christmas-lighted tower.

John Jairu Lumbera Roldan caught the full moon on December 11-12, 2019 and wrote: “The last full moon of this decade. Love, from the Philippines.” Back at you, John!

The moon appears full to the eye for two to three nights. However, astronomers regard the moon as full at a precisely defined instant, when the moon is exactly 180 degrees opposite the sun in ecliptic longitude.

Read more: Full Wolf Moon eclipse on January 10

Read more: What are the full moon names?

EarthSky 2020 lunar calendars are available! They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Full moon reflecting in a bay, with a very small couple embracing in the lower left corner.

A kiss under the full moon of November 3, 2017, via our friend Steven Sweet of Lunar 101-Moon Book. He was at Port Credit, a neighborhood in the city of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada … at the mouth of the Credit River on the north shore of Lake Ontario.

Why does a full moon look full? Remember that half the moon is always illuminated by the sun. That lighted half is the moon’s day side. In order to appear full to us on Earth, we have to see the entire day side of the moon. That happens only when the moon is opposite the sun in our sky. So a full moon looks full because it’s opposite the sun.

That’s also why every full moon rises in the east around sunset – climbs highest up for the night midway between sunset and sunrise (around midnight) – and sets around sunrise. Stand outside tonight around sunset and look for the moon. Sun going down while the moon is coming up? That’s a full moon, or close to one.

Just be aware that the moon will look full for at least a couple of night around the instant of full moon.

Diagram showing a full moon on the opposite side of Earth from the sun.

A full moon is opposite the sun. We see all of its dayside. Illustration via Bob King.

Often, you’ll find two different dates on calendars for the date of full moon. That’s because some calendars list moon phases in Coordinated Universal Time, also called Universal Time Coordinated (UTC). And other calendars list moon phases in local time, a clock time of a specific place, usually the place that made and distributed the calendars. Translate UTC to your local time.

Want to know the instant of full moon in your part of the world, as well as the moonrise and moonset times? Visit Sunrise Sunset Calendars, remembering to check the moon phases plus moonrise and moonset boxes.

If a full moon is opposite the sun, why doesn’t Earth’s shadow fall on the moon at every full moon? The reason is that the moon’s orbit is tilted by 5.1 degrees with respect to Earth’s orbit around the sun. At every full moon, Earth’s shadow sweeps near the moon. But, in most months, there’s no eclipse.

Oblique diagram of earth, sun, moon orbits. Moon orbit slightly slanted in relation to Earth's.

A full moon normally passes above or below Earth’s shadow, with no eclipse. Illustration by Bob King.

As the moon orbits Earth, it changes phase in an orderly way. Follow these links to understand the various phases of the moon.

New moon
Waxing crescent moon
First quarter moon
Waxing gibbous moon
Full moon
Waning gibbous moon
Last quarter moon
Waning crescent moon

EarthSky lunar calendars show the phases of the moon throughout 2020. They make great gifts. Order now. Going fast!

Bottom line: Full moon happens when the moon is most opposite the sun for any given month. The next full moon is January 10 at 19:21 UTC. Translate UTC to your time).

Read more: 4 keys to understanding moon phases



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2CEamRl

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