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  1. Jan 25, 2018 · Specificaly near the poles you would see the line between illuminated and shadowed part of the Moon very verticaly. At the equator horizontaly. And somewhere in the middle between the equator and the pole tilted under some angle. You would also see the Moon much lower on the horizon when standing near the poles and going near the zenith when ...

  2. Jun 13, 2019 · The moon is shown at 8 key stages during its revolution around the earth. The moon phase name is shown alongside the image. The dotted line from the earth to the moon represents your line of sight when looking at the moon. The large moon image shows what you would see at that point in the cycle.

  3. Nov 13, 2013 · But, if you mean to get a roughly calculation as on where the moon is at a certain time knowing its phase you can calculate it by knowing that the Earth spins 15°/hour and that the moon positions for each phase. Therefore, new moon the moon will be closer to the zenith at noon (local solar time), 6am for waxing moon, 12 am for full moon and ...

  4. Mar 4, 2021 · Everybody knows that the moon changes phases throughout the course of about a month. The lunar month is about 29 days. The moon goes through one cycle of its phases from new moon, through full moon, and back to new moon again, in a lunar month. We can see these changes in the slightly different appearance of the moon every evening.

  5. Jun 18, 2023 · 4. I recently found out that the moon's appearance changes based on one's latitude, and while googling for more information I found conflicting images about what the moon's phases look like from the equator. Some images (Example 1, Example 2) show the light of the moon starts from the bottom and grows up to the top while waxing, and then the ...

  6. Nov 1, 2022 · The phases of the Moon are defined in terms of the Moon's elongation: the difference in (geocentric) ecliptic longitudes of the Moon and Sun, with New Moon at 0°. The ecliptic latitude is ignored. From Wikipedia Lunar Phases. There are four principal (primary/major) lunar phases: the new moon, first quarter, full moon, and last quarter (also ...

  7. The Moon orbits around the Earth-Moon barycentre with an orbital period of 27.3 days and a synodic period (i.e. from Full Moon to Full Moon) of 29.5 days. An observer on the Moon-facing side of the Earth would certainly see the Moon go through its different phases, but it would still take 29.5 days.

  8. Sep 18, 2019 · A single cycle of Moon images cannot capture libration effects as the NASA SVS images do (see SpaceBread's answer), so Tanner's images look a little different from the actual Moon. Share Improve this answer

  9. Nov 7, 2020 · While you have "illumination" it would seem to be easier just to map "moon age" (in days) to a character. The average synodic month is 29.53 days, and you have 28 characters, so calculating age*28/29.53 and then rounding to give a number between 1 and 28 (or 0 and 27). Then it is just a matter of adding 97 if that number is in the range 0-13 ...

  10. Jul 5, 2016 · 4. The motion of the moon is known with great accuracy, and so the exact moment of a new moon (the moment that the sun and moon have the same longitude in the sky) can be calculated with great accuracy for tens of thousands of years into the future. This is the astronomical meaning of New moon, and the only one which is relevant here.

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