December full moon falls within a day of the solstice


December 22, 2018 will bring the final full moon of the year, falling less than a day after the December solstice. How close are the solstice and full moon in 2018? The solstice is December 21 at 22:23 UTC. The full moon is December 22 at 17:49 UTC. So the solstice and full moon fall less than one day apart. That means that – although the Northern Hemisphere has its longest winter night on December 21 – the lamp of a nearly full moon will light up the nighttime from dusk until dawn.

The last time the December solstice and full moon happened less than a day apart was in 2010, and the next time will be 2029.

2018’s December full moon counts the 3rd-closest – and thereby the 3rd-largest – of this year’s 13 full moons. But there’s some disagreement as to whether this full moon is a supermoon.

Read more: How many supermoons in 2019?

Between December 20 and 22, the moon will appear very round and full in the night sky. On December 20, it’ll pass near the V-shaped Face of the Bull in the constellation Taurus – a pattern in our sky also known as the Hyades – really, a star cluster in space. The bright red star Aldebaran (Eye of the Bull) is at one tip of the V, but it’s not a true member of the star cluster. Aldebaran is only about 65 light-years distant, while the Hyades cluster lies about 2.5 times farther away in space.

Then – on December 21 and 22 – the moon will go on to skirt near the upraised Club of the easy-to-spot constellation Orion the Hunter.

On December 22, you’ll find the full moon shining to the north of the constellation Orion, near the pattern of stars representing Orion’s Club. This full moon climbs up high, like the summer sun, for the Northern Hemisphere.

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).

That full moon instant arrives on December 22 at 17:49 UTC. At U.S. time zones, that places the full moon at 12:49 p.m. Eastern Time, 11:49 a.m. Central Time, 10:49 a.m. Mountain Time, 9:49 a.m. Pacific Time, 8:49 a.m. Alaskan Time and 7:49 a.m. Hawaiian Time on December 22.

Want to know the full moon time for your sky? Click here and be sure to check the Moon phases box.

In North America, we call the December full moon the Long Night Moon, Cold Moon or Moon Before Yule. In the Southern Hemisphere, where it’s summer now, names for this full moon include Strawberry Moon, Honey Moon and Rose Moon. Read more: What are the full moon names?

Day and night sides of Earth at the instant of the December full moon (December 22, 2018 at 17:49 UTC). The shadow line at left (running through North America and the Pacific Ocean) represents sunrise on December 22. The shadow line at right (running through Africa) depicts sunset December 22. And the shadow line at the lower right (between Australia and New Zealand) shows you where it’s sunrise on December 23. For the most part, you need to be on the nighttime of the world to see the moon at the instant that it turns full. But we’ll all see a full – or nearly full – moon in our sky on the nights around the 2018 December solstice (December 21). Image via the U.S. Naval observatory.

By the night of December 22 – as seen from the Americas – the December 22 moon is past full. It’s a full-looking waning gibbous moon. From the most of the Americas, the full moon happens during the daylight hours on December 22, when the moon is still beneath the horizon.

But no matter. As seen from North America and around the world, the moon remains more or less opposite the sun throughout the nights of December 21 and 22. Look for the moon to light up the eastern sky around dusk or nightfall, climb highest up for the night around midnight and to sit low in the west at daybreak.

As seen from the Northern Hemisphere, the December full moon mimics the lofty path of the June summer solstice sun. That’s because the sun is so far south right now, and because, at the vicinity of full moon, the moon rises and sets pretty much opposite the sun. Therefore, this December 2018 full moon rises and sets far north of due east and west, much as the sun does on the June solstice.

If you live as far north as Barrow, Alaska, you’d see no sun at all around the December solstice. But this solstice full moon will be out all hours around the clock – playacting as the midnight sun of summer.

As seen from the Southern Hemisphere, meanwhile, this same December full moon follows the low path of the June winter solstice sun.

Want to find out the sunrise/sunset and moonrise/moonset times for your sky? Click here and remember to check on the Moonrise and moonset box.

Unlike the full moon of December 2018, the full moons of December 2010 and December 2029 – also less than a day from a solstice – display total eclipses.

This December 2018 full moon won’t pass through the Earth’s dark shadow, but next month’s January 2019 supermoon will feature a total eclipse of the moon.

Joel Dorfan in San Diego saw the total Blue Moon eclipse on January 31, 2018. Exactly one lunar year (12 full moons) later, there will be another total lunar eclipse on January 21, 2019. Read more.

Bottom line: Full moon comes on December 22, 2018, one day after the solstice. The last time the December solstice and full moon happened less than one day apart was in 2010, and the next time will be 2029.



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December 22, 2018 will bring the final full moon of the year, falling less than a day after the December solstice. How close are the solstice and full moon in 2018? The solstice is December 21 at 22:23 UTC. The full moon is December 22 at 17:49 UTC. So the solstice and full moon fall less than one day apart. That means that – although the Northern Hemisphere has its longest winter night on December 21 – the lamp of a nearly full moon will light up the nighttime from dusk until dawn.

The last time the December solstice and full moon happened less than a day apart was in 2010, and the next time will be 2029.

2018’s December full moon counts the 3rd-closest – and thereby the 3rd-largest – of this year’s 13 full moons. But there’s some disagreement as to whether this full moon is a supermoon.

Read more: How many supermoons in 2019?

Between December 20 and 22, the moon will appear very round and full in the night sky. On December 20, it’ll pass near the V-shaped Face of the Bull in the constellation Taurus – a pattern in our sky also known as the Hyades – really, a star cluster in space. The bright red star Aldebaran (Eye of the Bull) is at one tip of the V, but it’s not a true member of the star cluster. Aldebaran is only about 65 light-years distant, while the Hyades cluster lies about 2.5 times farther away in space.

Then – on December 21 and 22 – the moon will go on to skirt near the upraised Club of the easy-to-spot constellation Orion the Hunter.

On December 22, you’ll find the full moon shining to the north of the constellation Orion, near the pattern of stars representing Orion’s Club. This full moon climbs up high, like the summer sun, for the Northern Hemisphere.

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).

That full moon instant arrives on December 22 at 17:49 UTC. At U.S. time zones, that places the full moon at 12:49 p.m. Eastern Time, 11:49 a.m. Central Time, 10:49 a.m. Mountain Time, 9:49 a.m. Pacific Time, 8:49 a.m. Alaskan Time and 7:49 a.m. Hawaiian Time on December 22.

Want to know the full moon time for your sky? Click here and be sure to check the Moon phases box.

In North America, we call the December full moon the Long Night Moon, Cold Moon or Moon Before Yule. In the Southern Hemisphere, where it’s summer now, names for this full moon include Strawberry Moon, Honey Moon and Rose Moon. Read more: What are the full moon names?

Day and night sides of Earth at the instant of the December full moon (December 22, 2018 at 17:49 UTC). The shadow line at left (running through North America and the Pacific Ocean) represents sunrise on December 22. The shadow line at right (running through Africa) depicts sunset December 22. And the shadow line at the lower right (between Australia and New Zealand) shows you where it’s sunrise on December 23. For the most part, you need to be on the nighttime of the world to see the moon at the instant that it turns full. But we’ll all see a full – or nearly full – moon in our sky on the nights around the 2018 December solstice (December 21). Image via the U.S. Naval observatory.

By the night of December 22 – as seen from the Americas – the December 22 moon is past full. It’s a full-looking waning gibbous moon. From the most of the Americas, the full moon happens during the daylight hours on December 22, when the moon is still beneath the horizon.

But no matter. As seen from North America and around the world, the moon remains more or less opposite the sun throughout the nights of December 21 and 22. Look for the moon to light up the eastern sky around dusk or nightfall, climb highest up for the night around midnight and to sit low in the west at daybreak.

As seen from the Northern Hemisphere, the December full moon mimics the lofty path of the June summer solstice sun. That’s because the sun is so far south right now, and because, at the vicinity of full moon, the moon rises and sets pretty much opposite the sun. Therefore, this December 2018 full moon rises and sets far north of due east and west, much as the sun does on the June solstice.

If you live as far north as Barrow, Alaska, you’d see no sun at all around the December solstice. But this solstice full moon will be out all hours around the clock – playacting as the midnight sun of summer.

As seen from the Southern Hemisphere, meanwhile, this same December full moon follows the low path of the June winter solstice sun.

Want to find out the sunrise/sunset and moonrise/moonset times for your sky? Click here and remember to check on the Moonrise and moonset box.

Unlike the full moon of December 2018, the full moons of December 2010 and December 2029 – also less than a day from a solstice – display total eclipses.

This December 2018 full moon won’t pass through the Earth’s dark shadow, but next month’s January 2019 supermoon will feature a total eclipse of the moon.

Joel Dorfan in San Diego saw the total Blue Moon eclipse on January 31, 2018. Exactly one lunar year (12 full moons) later, there will be another total lunar eclipse on January 21, 2019. Read more.

Bottom line: Full moon comes on December 22, 2018, one day after the solstice. The last time the December solstice and full moon happened less than one day apart was in 2010, and the next time will be 2029.



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