Known as "First Quarter". The moon appears half-illuminated. If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, it is the half you see to your RIGHT. The moon rises in the east at roughly Noon, and sets in the west at roughly Midnight.
About a week after a full moon will be a waning half moon.
A week after the full moon is the third quarter moon.
third quarter
its called a crescent moon.
third quater moon
First Quarter does.
29.531 days (rounded)
One week.
The complete cycle of the moon's 'phases' ... the time to go from any shapeto the next appearance of the same shape ... averages 29.531 days.
We're going to assume that the question is referring to the next Full Moon.The moon makes one complete orbit each 27.32 days, but the phases repeat witha period of 29.53 days. So the elapsed time from any phase to the next appearanceof the same phase is (29.53/27.32) = 1.081 orbits.
First Quarter does.
That is the first quarter moon which looks like a half moon.
Full moon
Approximately two to three.... and they depend on the theoretical "starting point" phase. It takes about two weeks for the moon to go from "new" to "full". So, in one week the moon could go from "first quarter" to "waxing gibbous" to "full"
29.531 days (rounded)
On the average: 29days 12hours45minutes (rounded)
On the average: 29days 12hours45minutes (rounded)
One week.
Full moon, or within one day of the full.
The time from one phase of the moon until the next time the moon reaches the same phase is 29.5 days.
It normally takes a week to change a phase
The time from one full moon to the next ... or between two occurrences of any phase of the moon ...is 27.32 days.