The shade of the earth on the moon is what causes the gibbous moon.
Usually its waxing gibbous or waning gibbous, and both are phases of the moon
It's called a waning gibbous moon.
The opposite of a gibbous moon is a crescent moon. A gibbous moon is when the illuminated portion of the moon is greater than half, while a crescent moon is when the illuminated portion is less than half.
In a gibbous moon phase, most of the moon that we see is lit.
A waxing gibbous moon is when the illuminated portion is increasing (more than half but less than full), while a waning gibbous moon is when the illuminated portion is decreasing (more than half but less than full). The transition from waxing to waning occurs after the full moon.
No, a 'gibbous moon' is part of the regular lunar cycle. The moon takes roughly 30 days to go from a new moon, through all its phases, to become a new moon again. For a little under 3/8th of this time, the moon will be a gibbous moon, which will either be waxing gibbous towards a full moon and waning gibbous away from it.
The "more than 50%" moon is called the gibbous moon. When it is "growing" (appearing to get larger), it is a Waxing Gibbous; when "shrinking," it's the Waning Gibbous.
We see more of the moon lit when it is a gibbous moon than when it is a crescent moon, so it does seem bigger. Save
A gibbous moon is the phase of the moon that comes anywhere between the full moon and the quarter moon (both waxing and waning). The word 'gibbous', I believe means "swollen on one side".
no
A gibbous moon is one of the phases of the Moon, when the size of the illuminated portion is greater than half but not a full Moon.
Waxing crescent, waxing gibbous, waning gibbous, waning crescent, new moon.