All of them, but not all at once. A full cycle - from one full moon to the next, for example - is 29 1/2 days.
Anywhere that it is night. inless if it is a new moon then you can not see the moon.
you can see the moon because the sun is not hitting the earth war the moon is hitting.
You see the moon at night when it reflects sunlight from the sun. The moon's appearance changes throughout the month as it orbits Earth, leading to different phases such as full moon, half moon, and crescent moon.
We can see the moon because it reflects sunlight to Earth.
The phases of the moon are caused by the relative positions of the sun, the moon and the observer. It is possible to see phases of the moon in space depending on your position relative to the sun and the moon.
Any moon apart from the new moon can be seen in the night sky, although the only moon phase that is above the horizon the entire night is the full moon. The gibbous phases either rise just before sunset or set after sunrise, the quarter phases either rise or set at midnight and the crescent phases either rise shortly before sunrise or set shortly before sunset.
No, each one of the moon's phases appears on a different night.
Yes, you would still see the moon phases because they are caused by the changing angles of sunlight hitting the surface of the moon as it orbits Earth. The size of the moon does not affect the appearance of these phases.
The effect is that we see the phases of the moon here on Earth. The reason for different phases is the angle and position of the sun and moon.
Phases
The phases are caused by the angle that the sunlight strikes the moon.
No, we see the same side of the moon as it orbits and goes through phases because the moon rotates at the same rate it orbits.