Diagram showing the Moon's phases.
Diagram of the Moon's phases: The Earth is at the center of the diagram and the Moon is shown orbiting (dashed circle). The Sun lights half of the Moon and Earth from the right-side. The phase of the Moon is shown next to the corresponding position of the Moon in its orbit around Earth. The phase is as seen in the Northern hemisphere of the Earth.

The phases of the Moon are the different ways the Moon looks from Earth.

As the Moon orbits around the Earth, the half of the Moon that faces the Sun will be lit up. The different shapes of the lit portion of the Moon that can be seen from Earth are known as phases of the Moon. Each phase repeats itself every 29.5 days.

The same half of the Moon always faces the Earth, because of tidal locking. So the phases will always occur over the same half of the Moon's surface.

Phases

Animation of the moon phases

A phase is an angle of the Moon to the Earth so it appears differently every day. The Moon goes through eight main phases.

"Blue moon"

Related pages

References

  1. However, a blue moon can also refer to the third full moon in a season with four full moons.
  2. Sinnott, Roger W., Donald W. Olson, and Richard Tresch Fienberg (May 1999). "What's a Blue Moon?". Sky & Telescope. Archived from the original on March 22, 2008. Retrieved February 9, 2008. The trendy definition of "blue Moon" as the second full Moon in a month is a mistake.((cite web)): CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)