same one
Nope! We always see the same side of the moon, even if it is a full moon.
No. The position the Moon has to be in for a full Moon is completely different than for a new moon. When we have a full Moon the Moon is on the opposite side of us to the Sun. When we have a new Moon, the Moon is on the same side of us as the Sun. It takes about 2 weeks for the Moon to go between those two positions, so it is not possible for it to happen on the same day.
No. The position the Moon has to be in for a full Moon is completely different than for a new moon. When we have a full Moon the Moon is on the opposite side of us to the Sun. When we have a new Moon, the Moon is on the same side of us as the Sun. It takes about 2 weeks for the Moon to go between those two positions, so it is not possible for it to happen on the same day.
Everywhere on Earth experiences the same moon phases at the same time - only that viewers in the Southern Hemisphere see the moon phases 'upside down' but the timing is the same and the same areas of the moon are illuminated. On Thursday October 17th, 2013, when this question was asked - the moon's phase was waxing gibbous, the day before the full moon. on Friday 18th October, 2013.
yes
The official moment of Full Moon in January 2011 was on 1/19 at 4:23 PM Eastern Time, although it would have appeared quite full for as much a day or two before and after that moment. Everybody who can see the moon at the same moment sees the same shape.
Yes. Everybody looking at the moon at the same time sees the same shape. When you think about it ... you can take the calendar or the newspaper and look up the date of the full moon. It gives the date, but it doesn't say anything about the location. Every location has the full moon on the same date.
May 30 of the same year.
Yes and no. The full moon affects everything on the planet. The full moon affects a vampire the same it does to a regular human.
No, but if you belive in that type of stuff it's your opinion. A full moon means nothing. It is no different (other then how we look at it) then the other days of the moon. The mass stays the same and the only thing that the moon changes is the waves in water.
Lunar phases are the result of looking at the illuminated half of the Moon from different viewing geometries; they are not caused by shadows of the Earth on the Moon that occur during a lunar eclipse. The Moon exhibits different phases as the relative geometry of the Sun, Earth and Moon change, appearing as a full moon when the Sun and Moon are on opposite sides of the Earth, and as a new moon (also named dark moon, as it is not visible at night) when they are on the same side. The phases of full moon and new moon are examples of syzygies, which occur when the Earth, Moon and Sun lie (approximately) in a straight line.
All of the Moon's lighted side is visible during the full moon.