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All you need to know: 2019's Hunter's Moon |
When the angle of the ecliptic is narrow, the moon rises noticeably farther north on your horizon from one night to the next. So there's no long period of darkness between sunset and moonrise. In other words, around the time of an autumn full moon, many people see the rising moon ascending in the eastern sky in twilight, for several evenings in a row. The precise time of this full moon is Sunday, October 13, at 21:08 UTC; translate UTC to your time. If you're in the Southern Hemisphere, your evening ecliptic is nearly perpendicular to your early evening horizon now. You'll see the full moon rise in twilight, but the next night's moon come up in darkness, much later at night. Image via ClassicalAstronomy.com. Read more about this weekend's Hunter's Moon. |
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