The moon looks the same as always but depending where you are in the world it may be in a different phase.
On December 1, 2010, the moon was a waxing crescent, so it would have appeared as a thin sliver in the sky. It would have been visible in the evening in the western sky shortly after sunset.
On December 3, 2010, the phase of the moon was a waxing crescent. This means that the moon was transitioning from a new moon to a first quarter moon, with only a small portion of its surface illuminated.
In December of 2010, the moon reaches apogee at 09 GMT on the 13th, and perigee at 12 GMT on the 25th.
Waning Gobbous, nearly third quarter.
It should look like a Waning Crescent. Almost a New Moon.
On December 1, 2010, the moon was a waxing crescent, so it would have appeared as a thin sliver in the sky. It would have been visible in the evening in the western sky shortly after sunset.
the moon was full
The Moon was new on January 14, 2010; there was a solar eclipse that day! So what the Moon look like? Like a dark blot across the Sun!
On December 3, 2010, the phase of the moon was a waxing crescent. This means that the moon was transitioning from a new moon to a first quarter moon, with only a small portion of its surface illuminated.
In December of 2010, the moon reaches apogee at 09 GMT on the 13th, and perigee at 12 GMT on the 25th.
A waning crescent... almost a new moon.
Waxing Crescent
amazing, obviously!!
The phase of the moon for Friday December 20, 2013 was Waning Gibbous.
On the 18th of September, 2010, the moon was a waxing gibbous. This means that it more than half of the moon was visible, but it was not yet a full moon.
On Yule, December 21,2010 there will not only be a full moon, but also a lunar eclipse
Waning Gobbous, nearly third quarter.