It's full.
Here.
Right now.
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Questions about "current" conditions aren't all that useful on WikiAnswers, where the question and the answers remain online for years. If you want to know the phase of the Moon "right now", there are apps for your Android smartphone or your iPhone, and there are many web sites that post the current phase of the Moon.
One useful site is the U.S. Naval Observatory's site, which offers all sorts of interesting data including the phases of the Moon and times of sunrise and sunset.
This question was posted on January 26, 2013. The Moon is "full" on January 27, 2013 at 4:38 AM Coordinated Universal Time (the fancy name for Greenwich Mean Time). So Alcohen2006's answer above was probably about 6 minutes off. Close enough!
The 'waxing gibbous' phase does.
full moon phase
no. the moon is going through one of its phases, but a lunar eclipse will not always happen during this as a lunar eclipse can happen in any phase.
Full Moon
It's always full at the time of a lunar eclipse.
Any specific lunar phase can be observed only at the time when that lunar phase occurs, and not again for 29.53 days thereafter.
No.
The 'waxing gibbous' phase does.
Full.
We do . . . Full.
full moon phase
Full Moon.
no. the moon is going through one of its phases, but a lunar eclipse will not always happen during this as a lunar eclipse can happen in any phase.
Only at the Full phase.
waxing gibbous
Full Moon
A phase current is the current passing through a phase, whereas a line current is the current flowing through a line.