Yes but only about 1.3 seconds ago as this is how long light takes to reach us from the Moon.
I don't have real-time data, but the moon's appearance changes throughout the lunar cycle. You can check a lunar calendar or moon phase app for specific details on what the moon has looked like in the past week.
The daylight side of the moon
The daylight side of the moon
less
The moon goes through phases from new moon to full moon and back again in a month. This past week, the moon has been waning, moving from a full moon to a new moon phase.
The past tense of "we look forward to seeing you" is "we looked forward to seeing you."
Yes, when we look at stars in the sky, we are seeing them as they were in the past because the light from stars takes time to travel to Earth, so we are seeing them as they appeared at a certain point in the past.
I don't have real-time data, but the moon's appearance changes throughout the lunar cycle. You can check a lunar calendar or moon phase app for specific details on what the moon has looked like in the past week.
The moon is about 250,000 miles from the earth. When the moon is viewed from earth, the image seen is only about one second in the past.
Yes, when we look up at the night sky and see stars, we are actually seeing them as they were in the past due to the time it takes for their light to reach us.
The past progressive tense of "see" is "was seeing" or "were seeing," depending on the subject pronoun. For example: "I was seeing," "You were seeing," "He/she/it was seeing," "We were seeing," "They were seeing."
In that case, you would also see a half moon if you could see the moon at all. The moon is in the same phase for everywhere on Earth, so if you can see it at all, you're seeing it in the same phase that anyone else on Earth is seeing.
The moon is one day past first quarter. It will look just slightly more than half lit.
The moon was in the waning crescent phase, 9 days past full and 5 days from the new moon on the 23rd.
Nothing special. The Moon has days and nights like Earth does, except on the Moon it takes 29.5 days for one lunar "day" and "night".When you look at the Moon and it is "waning", what you are seeing is night falling (slowly) on the side of the Moon that we can see.
The daylight side of the moon
The daylight side of the moon