The time of the moon's rising is always later than it was the day before. The difference from
one to the next varies over a wide range, but it averages out to roughly 49 minutes.
On the average, the answer to the question is: 9:49 PM.
The moon takes about 25 hours to circle the earth, so just like any place in the world, the moon rises about an hour later each night. During the full moon, it rises just about sunset and when the moon is new, it rises with the sun. There are 6 time zones in Canada and this needs to be factored in as well.
The Moon is new tonight; it rose about when the Sun did, and will set about when the Sun does. Tomorrow evening, you may - perhaps - see a sliver of a crescent Moon low in the western sky at sunset.
The Moon will be visible just after sunset tomorrow night, September 21, and every night for the next 25 days. Then the Moon will be too close to the Sun to be visible for a couple of days, and then the cycle will repeat again. As it has every month for 4 BILLION years.
With the exception of the sun and moon, nothing in the sky rises or sets. Everything in the sky moves in a circle, with the center of every circle located at the point directly over your head. The moon rises and sets once a month, and the sun rises and sets once a year.
Yes New Moon rises at dawn and sets at dusk 1st Quarter Moon rises around noon and sets at midnight Full Moon rises at dusk and sets at dawn 3rd Quarter Moon rises at midnight and sets at noon
what well the moon look like tomorrow night
at night
If tonight the phase of the moon is full when it rises what will be the phase 4 days from now is in the waning gibbous stage.
The moon not only rises at night but it also rises during the day. The moon rising and setting is related to the moon's orbit around the earth and the eartrh'sorbit around the sun.
The name of the Moon is "Moon" or "Luna". It does not depend on the night.
it would be a fullmoon im thinking
Tonight
Each night the moon rise changes, So.... If you go to timeanddate.com, you can select a location in the drop-down menu and see times for moonrise and moonset in that location. Also provided is local time when the Moon passes the meridian with distance, fraction of the Moon illuminated and moon phase.
No and no. The moon rises at intervals separated by approximately 25 hours. Sometimes it rises at night, sometime it rises during the day. It always rises "in the east", but the precise location varies: sometimes it's further north, sometimes further south.
Tonight the 16th November 2009 is a new Moon, so last night there should have been no Moon visible.
People become werewolves and you can't see the stars as well on a night with a full moon. The full moon always rises when the sun sets and sets when the sun rises.
When the sun rises and when the sun goes down and the moon comes up in the night ?:)