The Full Moon rises at roughly the same time as the sun sets.
Like every other astronomical body, the moon ... at whatever phase ...
rises from the eastern horizon.
Southern
sun raise
It depends on from where a person is! In the UK, the moon first appears roughly in he Eastern sky.
The moon doesn't technically "rise" in the sky. It is circling the Earth. This is why each night it is in a different spot in the sky.
Moon is orbiting the earth in 28 days , and when earth is between the moon and sun, a full moon occurs as moon rise in the east and full moon remains visible through out the night in the sky.
A full moon rises at sunset.
Southern
sun raise
the next full moon
They can certainly rise side by side, but it might be difficult to see the Moon in such a case.
It depends on from where a person is! In the UK, the moon first appears roughly in he Eastern sky.
The moon doesn't technically "rise" in the sky. It is circling the Earth. This is why each night it is in a different spot in the sky.
Moon is orbiting the earth in 28 days , and when earth is between the moon and sun, a full moon occurs as moon rise in the east and full moon remains visible through out the night in the sky.
It rises on June 4
gravitationl
The moon was full on October 23, 2010, and it's not full on October 26th, 2010. The Full Moon always rises very close to the time of sunset.
it rises at sunset and sets at sunrise