If the water is to the east of you and you watch at the right time, you can see the moon (and the sun too) rise out of the water. If the water is to the west of you and you watch at the right time, you can see the moon (and the sun too) set into the water.
Every object visible in the sky sets in the west.The phase of the moon has no relationship to and no effect onthe motion of any other natural object in the sky.
First, im not sure if it is the same for all watches but i have the GW7900b-1. Go to the tide mode, hold down the adjust button until the tide starts flashing, find out what time the next high tide is and bam the tide is set :)
At the time of the New Moon, an observer on the moon sees a Full Earth.(But he has to be on the dark side of the moon to see it.)Here's something to think about that strikes us as strangely beautiful in a way:The earth-phase seen from the moon is exactly the part of the moon that's missingas seen from earth.In other words, if you take the earth phase seen from the moon, and add it on tothe moon phase seen from earth, they always add up to make exactly one full disk.
The S Phase, with the "S" being synthesis.
If the water is to the east of you and you watch at the right time, you can see the moon (and the sun too) rise out of the water. If the water is to the west of you and you watch at the right time, you can see the moon (and the sun too) set into the water.
Since the phases repeat continuously throughout the lifetime of a person, it's hard to saywhere the beginning of the cycle is.Many cultures consider the beginning to be the phase where you can't see any of the moon at all.Which leads naturally to the name by which that phase is commonly known ... "New Moon".If you accept that point as the beginning of the cycle, then the phase in the middle of the cycleis the "Full Moon".
At full moon, the Moon is opposite the Sun. It will (approximately) rise at sunset, and set at sunrise.At new moon, the moon is in the same direction as the Sun. It is still there, we just cant see the side lit by sunlight as it is facing away from the Earth when in the New Moon phase.
Every object visible in the sky sets in the west.The phase of the moon has no relationship to and no effect onthe motion of any other natural object in the sky.
If by horizontally you mean on the horizon, then yes it can be seen this way. Given the right conditions and time you can watch the moon rise and set on the horizon.
Every object visible in the sky sets in the west.The phase of the moon has no relationship to and no effect onthe motion of any other natural object in the sky.
First, im not sure if it is the same for all watches but i have the GW7900b-1. Go to the tide mode, hold down the adjust button until the tide starts flashing, find out what time the next high tide is and bam the tide is set :)
Any moon apart from the new moon can be seen in the night sky, although the only moon phase that is above the horizon the entire night is the full moon. The gibbous phases either rise just before sunset or set after sunrise, the quarter phases either rise or set at midnight and the crescent phases either rise shortly before sunrise or set shortly before sunset.
The moon only rises in the evening during the full moon phase, when it is on the opposite side of the Earth as the sun. When the moon is close to new, it will set at the same time as the sun because it is in the same direction as the sun.
There is no phase of the Moon that does exactly that every time, but approximately it is first-quarter, which is a half moon with the bright side to the west.To rise at noon and set at midnight the Moon has to be around zero degrees declination (i.e. on the equator) and on the ecliptic 90 degrees behind the Sun. That happens around the summer solstice, June 21, or the winter solstice, December 21.
S phase
You see Earth's revolution around the sun.. the moon revolves around the Earth, not the other way around.