It's impossible to know how many times a Full Moon has been in the same sign as another planet because it's very common for it to happen.
A moon? I don't think a planet orbiting another planet would be called a planet.
The Earth is to the Moon as a planet is to its moon. So, if we're talking about a satellite orbiting a planet, then the planet would be analogous to the Earth, and the satellite would be analogous to the Moon.
When the sun and the moon are on opposite sides of our planet.
Another new moon and another full moon. And if you catch it just right, all of the other phases are in there too.
29.53 days
A moon, when referring to a natural rock like satellite, not a man made artificial satellite such as Telstar.
AS the moon is in its phases and appears in full (full moon) our planet earth is somewhat away from the connecting line between the moon and and the sun. so it appears to us as full moon. during this phase if our planet earth comes across the line of sight between the moon and the sun, it shadows upon the surface of the moon. we call this phenomina as lunar eclipse.
it would break or if a small planet bumped itnto juipeter, juipeter would have another moon.
The effect of a planet or satellite casting a shadow on another is called an eclipse. We see this most often when the earth goes between the moon and the sun. We have solar eclipses where the moon goes between the earth and sun also.
29.5 days.
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A moon is an object that orbits a planet. A planet cannot orbit another planet.