Yes sometimes there are 2 full moons during one month. These do not happen very often and the second full moon is called a 'blue moon', hence the expression, "once in a blue moon".
February is the only month capable of not having a full moon, although it almost always has one.The only thing that February can't possibly have that other months can is two full moons.Every other month except February must have one full moon, and is capable of having two of them.
Lunar eclipses always occur at the full moon, while solar eclipses can only happen during a new moon. thats a horrible answer , you could get that from watching twilight once.
No, spring tides do not only occur in spring. Spring tides happen twice a month, around the new moon and full moon, when the sun, moon, and Earth are aligned. This alignment causes the gravitational pull of the sun and moon to reinforce each other, creating higher than normal tides.
When the conditions are right, a lunar eclipse can happen in ANY month, but only at the time of Full Moon.
A lunar eclipse can only happen during a full moon when the Earth is positioned between the sun and the moon, casting its shadow on the moon.
The moon takes one month to complete a revolution around the earth. A full moon occurs when the moon is on the opposite side of the earth from the sun (opposition). The full moon can only happen at this part of the lunar orbit, and it takes one month to complete the orbit; thus, full moon happens once a month.
A Blue moon is the second full moon in a month. It happens only once in a while, therefore the old saying "Once in a blue moon."
January, 2012 has one full moon. Two full moons in one month only happens once in a blue moon.
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.
Every month has a full moon. If you look at a calander that has the moon phases, you will see that every month has one.
Because there is one full moon every 29 days, and each month is either 30 or 31 days. So February (with only 28 or 29 days) can NEVER have two full moons, and two full moons in one calendar month will only happen about once every 29 months; call it once every 2.5 years on average.
no,a full moon can be seen at the end of the month,or at the middle of the month from when it is waning and waxing.
The full moon only actually lasts one day, so only one day in a month is there a full moon (although it will look full for a few days).
February is the only month capable of not having a full moon, although it almost always has one.The only thing that February can't possibly have that other months can is two full moons.Every other month except February must have one full moon, and is capable of having two of them.
February is the only month capable of not having a full moon, although it almost always has one.The only thing that February can't possibly have that other months can is two full moons.Every other month except February must have one full moon, and is capable of having two of them.
It was, no doubt, a February. About every 30 years, the moon is full on January 2nd, and again on January 31. The next full moon happens to be on March 1! An entire MONTH (well, it was only February, which IS the shortest month) with no full moons!
when there is five full moons means a witch is about