its
crust
sunrise
it rises at sunset and sets at sunrise
In that case it must be near sunrise.
6 AM is pretty close to sunrise, so if the Moon is setting while the Sun is rising, then the Moon must be pretty close to being Full.
I don't think there is one. It's possible, though rare, for the moon to be full just after sunrise or just before sunset ... this happened recently in Southern California, when there was a lunar eclipse visible right about the time of sunrise. Lunar eclipses can only occur when the moon is full. (Technically, the moon wasn't "full", exactly; that had occurred a few hours before ... but it was so close that the difference was unnoticeable to the naked eye.)
I don't think there is one. It's possible, though rare, for the moon to be full just after sunrise or just before sunset ... this happened recently in Southern California, when there was a lunar eclipse visible right about the time of sunrise. Lunar eclipses can only occur when the moon is full. (Technically, the moon wasn't "full", exactly; that had occurred a few hours before ... but it was so close that the difference was unnoticeable to the naked eye.)
Sunrise: 5:24am Sunset: 8:28pm Full Moon: 3:15pm
A full moon happens once every month, usally around the same time. You know when you can see a sliver of the moon,then other times you can see the while thing? Its a light illusion. Full moons are about as bright as a street light, and if you know what a street light is, its so bright it can be seem from far away even at DAYTIME!
Since the new moon is between the Sun and the Earth, it will always rise at sunrise, whatever the time of sunrise is at any particular location.
Full moon.
That's a Full Moon ... 14.77 days after the New Moon. If the moon also happens to be directly in line with Earth's shadow ... not above it or below it ... then you have a lunar eclipse at the time of the Full Moon.
The exact time the moon reaches it's highest point in the sky varies with the moon's phases, but using the four major moon phases as an example, the New Moon is highest at noon, First Quarter is highest at sunset, Full Moon is highest at midnight and Third Quarter is highest at sunrise.