No. When the moon is full, it appears half-the-sky away from the sun,
so it can't be in the sky at the same time that the sun is.
You will never see a full moon during daytime. This is because the full moon is directly opposite the sun in the sky, making it visible only at night when the sun has set.
Yes, the moon can be seen during the daytime on a full moon day. The moon is above the horizon for most of the day during a full moon, making it visible even in the daytime. However, the brightness of the sun may make it harder to see the moon clearly.
The moon is sometimes visible during the daytime because its position in its orbit around the Earth causes it to be in the sky at the same time the sun is. Depending on its phase, angle, and position relative to the sun and Earth, the moon can be visible during the day.
Out of every 24 hours, the moon is up in the sky for about 12hours 49minutes. In the course of a month, it spends the same number of hours in the daytime sky as it does in the night-time sky. The way it works out, though, the moon's phase ... the amount that's illuminated ... is smaller in the day and larger at night, on the long-term average. Technically, the Full Moon rises at sunset, so it's the only phase that's not visible in the daytime.
A daytime moon is commonly referred to as a "day moon." It is the same astronomical body as the moon that is visible at night but is observed during the day.
Full
Because you're not looking in the right place. I have often seen the Moon in the daytime; it's not a rare occurrence. ____________________________________________________________ Earth's moon is often visible during the daytime. Seeing the Moon before dark, or even in bright daylight, is an ordinary occurrence.
full moon
The entire night? Only one night, during the full moon, when the Moon rises at sunset and sets at sunrise. However, the Moon is generally visible in the daytime as well, except for a day either side of the new moon.
All of it. That's why it's called a "full" moon.
Because this is how the moon cycle works: MOON---EARTH---SUN=full moon EARTH---MOON---SUN=new moon. So, when you see the moon during the daytime, it's because its orbit is interfering with the Sun's. But during a full moon, when the moon is behind the Earth, it cannot interfere. See?
A lunar eclipse happens during a full moon