You can find out your sun sign simply by seeing when your birthday falls in the dates below.
Aries: March 21 – April 19
Taurus: April 20 – May 20
Gemini: May 21 – June 20
Cancer: June 21 – July 22
Leo: July 23 – August 22
Virgo: August 23 – September 22
Libra: September 23 – October 22
Scorpio: October 23 – November 21
Sagittarius: November 22 – December 21
Capricorn: December 22 – January 19
Aquarius: January 20 – February 18
Pisces: February 19 – March 20
You can calculate your moon sign at cafeastrology dot com/whats-my-moon-sign.html
You will observe both the Sun and the Moon.
when the sun/moon appears to slowly meet the horizon and disappear
The Sun, Stars and Moon in the sky where created in the begining by God for signs and seasons
refraction
The moon is below the horizon during the nighttime hours when the moon is new but even when it is above the horizon it can't be seen because the shadowed side of the moon is facing us on Earth and the moon is so close to the sun that it is lost in the sun's glare.
It is when the sun or moon breaks the horizon. And sunset and moonset happen when the last bit (trailing limb) goes below the horizon.
You will observe both the Sun and the Moon.
when the sun/moon appears to slowly meet the horizon and disappear
The Sun, Stars and Moon in the sky where created in the begining by God for signs and seasons
No, they just look larger.
Sunrise (and moonrise) is when the leading edge of the sun just breaks the horizon, and sunset is when the trailing edge of the sun just sinks below the horizon. Observations may differ slightly from calculated times, since air conditions will effect the bending of the light
If you see the Moon on the western horizon, it is setting in the sky.Both the moon and the sun RISE IN THE EAST AND SET IN THE WEST.
refraction
The Horizon
The moon is below the horizon during the nighttime hours when the moon is new but even when it is above the horizon it can't be seen because the shadowed side of the moon is facing us on Earth and the moon is so close to the sun that it is lost in the sun's glare.
No. Seen from either pole, the moon is continuously below the horizon for roughly 14.8 days, followed by another 14.8 continuous days when it's above the horizon.
That would place the moon 1/4 of a full sky away from the sun, but the Full Moon is fullonly because it's 1/2 of a full sky away from the sun. So when the moon is full, it must risefrom one horizon at the same time that the sun is setting at the opposite horizon.