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The supermoon of 14 November 2016 was 356,511 km (221,526 mi) away[1] from the center of Earth. Supermoons occur 3–4 times per year.[2]
As the Earth revolves around the Sun, approximate axial parallelism of the Moon's orbital plane (tilted five degrees to the Earth's orbital plane) results in the revolution of the lunar nodes relative to the Earth. This causes an eclipse season approximately every six months, in which a lunar eclipse can occur at the full moon phase.

The full moon is the lunar phase when the Moon appears fully illuminated from Earth's perspective. This occurs when Earth is located between the Sun and the Moon (when the ecliptic longitudes of the Sun and Moon differ by 180°).[3] This means that the lunar hemisphere facing Earth—the near side—is completely sunlit and appears as an approximately circular disk. The full moon occurs roughly once a month.

The time interval between a full moon and the next repetition of the same phase, a synodic month, averages about 29.53 days. Because of irregularities in the moon's orbit, the new and full moons may fall up to thirteen hours either side of their mean. If the calendar date is not locally determined through observation of the new moon at the beginning of the month there is the potential for a further twelve hours difference depending on the time zone. Potential discrepancies also arise from whether the calendar day is considered to begin in the evening or at midnight. It is normal for the full moon to fall on the fourteenth or the fifteenth of the month according to whether the start of the month is reckoned from the appearance of the new moon or from the conjunction.[4]

Culturally and spiritually significant across many societies, full moons are associated with festivals such as Vesak in Buddhism and various Purnima observances in Hinduism. Many traditions have named specific full moons—like the harvest moon or hunter's moon—and linked them to seasonal or agricultural events. Folklore has associated full moons with insomnia, madness, and supernatural events, though scientific studies have not found consistent evidence of behavioral effects. In modern times, terms like “blood moon” and “blue moon” have entered popular use, often referring to lunar eclipses or rare lunar events.

A tabular lunar calendar will also exhibit variations depending on the intercalation system used. Because a calendar month consists of a whole number of days, a month in a lunar calendar may be either 29 or 30 days long.

Characteristics

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A full moon is often thought of as an event of a full night's duration, although its phase seen from Earth continuously waxes or wanes, and is full only at the instant when waxing ends and waning begins. For any given location, about half of these maximum full moons may be visible, while the other half occurs during the day, when the full moon is below the horizon. As the Moon's orbit is inclined by 5.145° from the ecliptic, it is not generally perfectly opposite from the Sun during full phase, therefore a full moon is in general not perfectly full except on nights with a lunar eclipse as the Moon crosses the ecliptic at opposition from the Sun.

Many almanacs list full moons not only by date, but also by their exact time, usually in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Typical monthly calendars that include lunar phases may be offset by one day when prepared for a different time zone.

The full moon is generally a suboptimal time for astronomical observation of the Moon because shadows vanish. It is a poor time for other observations because the bright sunlight reflected by the Moon, amplified by the opposition surge, then outshines many stars.

Moon phases

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There are eight phases of the moon, which vary from partial to full illumination. The moon phases are also called lunar phases. These stages have different names that come from its shape and size at each phase. For example, the crescent moon is 'banana' shaped, and the half-moon is D-shaped. When the moon is nearly full, it is called a gibbous moon. The crescent and gibbous moons each last approximately a week.[5]

Each phase is also described in accordance to its position on the full 29.5-day cycle. The eight phases of the moon in order:[5]

  • new moon
  • waxing crescent moon
  • first quarter moon
  • waxing gibbous moon
  • full moon
  • waning gibbous moon
  • last quarter moon
  • waning crescent moon

Formula

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The date and approximate time of a specific full moon (assuming a circular orbit) can be calculated from the following equation:[6]

where d is the number of days since 1 January 2000 00:00:00 in the Terrestrial Time scale used in astronomical ephemerides; for Universal Time (UT) add the following approximate correction to d:

days

where N is the number of full moons since the first full moon of 2000. The true time of a full moon may differ from this approximation by up to about 14.5 hours as a result of the non-circularity of the Moon's orbit.[7] See New moon for an explanation of the formula and its parameters.

The age and apparent size of the full moon vary in a cycle of just under 14 synodic months, which has been referred to as a full moon cycle.

Lunar eclipses

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When the Moon moves into Earth's shadow, a lunar eclipse occurs, during which all or part of the Moon's face may appear reddish due to the Rayleigh scattering of blue wavelengths and the refraction of sunlight through Earth's atmosphere.[8][9][10] Lunar eclipses happen only during a full moon and around points on its orbit where the satellite may pass through the planet's shadow. A lunar eclipse does not occur every month because the Moon's orbit is inclined 5.145° with respect to the ecliptic plane of Earth; thus, the Moon usually passes north or south of Earth's shadow, which is mostly restricted to this plane of reference. Lunar eclipses happen only when the full moon occurs around either node of its orbit (ascending or descending). Therefore, a lunar eclipse occurs about every six months, and often two weeks before or after a solar eclipse, which occurs during a new moon around the opposite node.

In folklore and tradition

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A full moon rising, seen through the Belt of Venus

In Buddhism, Vesak is celebrated on the full moon day of the Vaisakha month, marking the birth, enlightenment, and the death of the Buddha.[11]

In Arabic, badr (بدر ) means 'full moon', but it is often translated as 'white moon', referring to The White Days, the three days when the full moon is celebrated.

Full moons are traditionally associated with insomnia (inability to sleep), insanity (hence the terms lunacy and lunatic) and various "magical phenomena" such as lycanthropy. Psychologists, however, have found that there is no strong evidence for effects on human behavior around the time of a full moon.[12] They find that studies are generally not consistent, with some showing a positive effect and others showing a negative effect. In one instance, the 23 December 2000 issue of the British Medical Journal published two studies on dog bite admission to hospitals in England and Australia. The study of the Bradford Royal Infirmary found that dog bites were twice as common during a full moon, whereas the study conducted by the public hospitals in Australia found that they were less likely.

Symbol of the Triple Goddess

The symbol of the Triple Goddess is drawn with the circular image of the full moon in the center flanked by a left facing crescent and right facing crescent, on either side, representing a maiden, mother and crone archetype.[13]

Full moon names

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Historically, month names are names of moons (lunations, not necessarily full moons) in lunisolar calendars. Since the introduction of the solar Julian calendar in the Roman Empire, and later the Gregorian calendar worldwide, people no longer perceive month names as "moon" names. The traditional Old English month names were equated with the names of the Julian calendar from an early time, soon after the Christianisation of Anglo-Saxon England. This can be seen in the testimony of Bede from The Reckoning of Time (CE 725), where lunar month names are equated with the approximate Roman equivalents.

Some full moons have developed new names in modern times, such as "blue moon", as well as "harvest moon" and "hunter's moon" for the full moons of autumn.

The golden or reddish hue of the Harvest Moon and other full moons near the horizon is caused by atmospheric scattering. When the Moon is low in the sky, its light passes through a thicker layer of Earth's atmosphere, scattering shorter wavelengths like blue and violet and allowing longer wavelengths, such as red and yellow, to dominate. This effect, combined with environmental factors such as dust, pollutants, or haze, can intensify or dull the Moon's color. Clear skies often enhance the yellow or golden appearance, particularly during the autumn months when these full moons are observed.[14]

Lunar eclipses occur only at a full moon and often cause a reddish hue on the near side of the Moon. This full moon has been called a blood moon in popular culture.[15]

Harvest and hunter's moons

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A harvest moon. Its orange color is due to greater Rayleigh scattering as the Moon appears close above the horizon, rather than being unique to harvest moons.[16]

The "harvest moon" and the "hunter's moon" are traditional names for the full moons in late summer and in the autumn in the Northern Hemisphere, usually in September and October, respectively.[17] People may celebrate these occurrences in festivities such as the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival.

The "harvest moon" (also known as the "barley moon" or "full corn moon") is the full moon nearest to the autumnal equinox (22 or 23 September), occurring anytime within two weeks before or after that date.[18] The "hunter's moon" is the full moon following it. The names are recorded from the early 18th century.[19] The Oxford English Dictionary entry for "harvest moon" cites a 1706 reference, and for "hunter's moon" a 1710 edition of The British Apollo, which attributes the term to "the country people" ("The Country People call this the Hunters-Moon.") The names became traditional in American folklore, where they are now often popularly attributed to Native Americans.[20] The Feast of the Hunters' Moon is a yearly festival in West Lafayette, Indiana, held in late September or early October each year since 1968.[21] In 2010 the harvest moon occurred on the night of the equinox itself (some 512 hours after the moment of equinox) for the first time since 1991, after a period known as the Metonic cycle.[22][23]

All full moons rise around the time of sunset. Since the Moon moves eastward among the stars faster than the Sun, lunar culmination is delayed by about 50.47 minutes[24] (on average) each day, thus causing moonrise to occur later each day.

Due to the high lunar standstill, the harvest and hunter's moons of 2007 were special because the time difference between moonrises on successive evenings was much shorter than average. The moon rose about 30 minutes later from one night to the next, as seen from about 40° N or S latitude (because the full moon of September 2007 rose in the northeast rather than in the east). Hence, no long period of darkness occurred between sunset and moonrise for several days after the full moon,[25] thus lengthening the time in the evening when there is enough twilight and moonlight to work to get the harvest in.

Native American

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Various 18th and 19th century writers gave what were claimed to be Native American or First Nations moon names. These were not the names of the full moons as such, but were the names of lunar months beginning with each new moon. According to Jonathan Carver in 1778, "Some nations among them reckon their years by moons, and make them consist of twelve synodical or lunar months, observing, when thirty moons have waned, to add a supernumerary one, which they term the lost moon; and then begin to count as before." Carver gave the names of the lunar months (starting from the first after the March equinox) as Worm, Plants, Flowers, Hot, Buck, Sturgeon, Corn, Travelling, Beaver, Hunting, Cold, Snow.[26] Carver's account was reproduced verbatim in Events in Indian History (1841),[27] but completely different lists were given by Eugene Vetromile (1856)[28] and Peter Jones (1861).[29]

In a book on Native American culture published in 1882, Richard Irving Dodge stated:[30]

There is a difference among authorities as to whether or not the moons themselves are named. Brown gives names for nine moons corresponding to months. Maximillian gives the names of twelve moons; and Belden, who lived many years among the Sioux, asserts that "the Indians compute their time very much as white men do, only they use moons instead of months to designate the seasons, each answering to some month in our calendar." Then follows a list of twelve moons with Indian and English names. While I cannot contradict so positive and minute a statement of one so thoroughly in a position to know, I must assert with equal positiveness that I have never met any wild Indians, of the Sioux or other Plains tribes, who had a permanent, common, conventional name for any moon. The looseness of Belden's general statement, that "Indians compute time like white people," when his only particularization of similarity is between the months and moons, is in itself sufficient to render the whole statement questionable. My experience is that the Indian, in attempting to fix on a particular moon, will designate it by some natural and well-known phenomenon which culminates during that moon. But two Indians of the same tribe may fix on different designations; and even the same Indian, on different occasions, may give different names to the same moon. Thus, an Indian of the middle Plains will to-day designate a spring moon as "the moon when corn is planted;" to-morrow, speaking of the same moon, he may call it "the moon when the buffalo comes." Moreover, though there are thirteen moons in our year, no observer has ever given an Indian name to the thirteenth. My opinion is, that if any of the wild tribes have given conventional names to twelve moons, it is not an indigenous idea, but borrowed from the whites.

Jonathan Carver's list of purportedly Native American month names was adopted in the 19th century by the Improved Order of Red Men, an all-white U.S. fraternal organization. They called the month of January "Cold moon", the rest being Snow, Worm, Plant, Flower, Hot, Buck, Sturgeon, Corn, Travelling, Beaver and Hunting moon. They numbered years from the time of Columbus's arrival in America.[31]

In The American Boy's Book of Signs, Signals and Symbols (1918), Daniel Carter Beard wrote: "The Indians' Moons naturally vary in the different parts of the country, but by comparing them all and striking an average as near as may be, the moons are reduced to the following."[32] He then gave a list that had two names for each lunar month, again quite different from earlier lists that had been published.

The 1937 Maine Farmers' Almanac published a list of full moon names that it said "were named by our early English ancestors as follows":[33]

Winter Moons: Moon after Yule, Wolf Moon, Lenten Moon
Spring Moons: Egg Moon, Milk Moon, Flower Moon
Summer Moons: Hay Moon, Grain Moon, Fruit Moon
Fall Moons: Harvest Moon, Hunter's Moon, Moon before Yule

It also mentioned blue moon. These were considered in some quarters to be Native American full moon names, and some were adopted by colonial Americans.[34] The Farmers' Almanac (since 1955 published in Maine, but not the same publication as the Maine Farmers' Almanac) continues to print such names.[35][36]

Such names have gained currency in American folklore. They appeared in print more widely outside of the almanac tradition from the 1990s in popular publications about the Moon. Mysteries of the Moon by Patricia Haddock ("Great Mysteries Series", Greenhaven Press, 1992) gave an extensive list of such names along with the individual tribal groups they were supposedly associated with.[37] Haddock supposes that certain "Colonial American" moon names were adopted from Algonquian languages (which were formerly spoken in the territory of New England), while others are based in European tradition (e.g. the Colonial American names for the May moon, "Milk Moon", "Mother's Moon", "Hare Moon" have no parallels in the supposed native names, while the name of November, "Beaver Moon" is supposedly based in an Algonquian language). Many other names have been reported.[38]

These have passed into modern mythology, either as full-moon names, or as names for lunar months. Deanna J. Conway's Moon Magick: Myth & Magick, Crafts & Recipes, Rituals & Spells (1995) gave as headline names for the lunar months (from January): Wolf, Ice, Storm, Growing, Hare, Mead, Hay, Corn, Harvest, Blood, Snow, Cold.[39] Conway also gave multiple alternative names for each month, e.g. the first lunar month after the winter solstice could be called the Wolf, Quiet, Snow, Cold, Chaste or Disting Moon, or the Moon of Little Winter.[39]: 19  For the last lunar month Conway offered the names Cold, Oak or Wolf Moon, or Moon of Long Nights, Long Night's Moon, Aerra Geola (Month Before Yule), Wintermonat (Winter Month), Heilagmanoth (Holy Month), Big Winter Moon, Moon of Popping Trees.[39]: 247  Conway did not cite specific sources for most of the names she listed, but some have gained wider currency as full-moon names, such as Pink Moon for a full moon in April, [39]: 77 [40] Long Night's Moon for the last in December[41] and Ice Moon for the first full moon of January or February.[42]

Sturgeon Moon – August 2025

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In August 2025, the full moon — traditionally known as the Sturgeon Moon[43] — offered a rare two-night viewing opportunity for much of North America. The moon officially reached fullness at 3:55 a.m. ET on Saturday, August 9, allowing for near-identical moonrises on both August 8 and 9, just after sunset. This unusual phenomenon was the result of a shortened moonrise delay of approximately 30 minutes between the two nights, caused by the moon's low trajectory in the southern sky during this time of year.[43]

In New York City, the moon rose at 8:03 p.m. ET on August 8, followed by 8:32 p.m. ET on August 9, both times occurring during civil twilight, creating ideal conditions for moonwatching. Across the continental United States, similar viewing times were observed.

The name Sturgeon Moon originates from the abundance of sturgeon fish in the Great Lakes during late summer. Other traditional names for the August full moon include the Wild Rice Moon (Anishinaabeg), Green Corn Moon, and Grain Moon, reflecting seasonal agricultural practices across various Indigenous cultures.

Hindu full moon festivals

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In Hinduism, most festivals are celebrated on auspicious days. Many Hindu festivals are celebrated on days with a full moon night, called the purnima. Different parts of India celebrate the same festival with different names, as listed below:

  1. Chaitra Purnima – Gudi Padua, Ugadi, Hanuman Jayanti (15 April 2014)[44]
  2. Vaishakha Purnima – Narasimha Jayanti, Buddha Jayanti (14 May 2014)[45]
  3. Jyeshtha Purnima – Savitri Vrata, Vat Purnima (8 June 2014)[46]
  4. Ashadha Purnima – Guru Purnima, Vyasa Purnima
  5. Shravana Purnima – Upanayana ceremony, Avani Avittam, Raksha Bandhan, Onam
  6. Bhadrapada Purnima – Start of Pitru Paksha, Madhu Purnima
  7. Ashvin Purnima – Sharad Purnima
  8. Kartika Purnima – Karthikai Deepam, Thrukkarthika
  9. Margashirsha Purnima – Thiruvathira, Dattatreya Jayanti
  10. Pushya Purnima – Thaipusam, Shakambhari Purnima
  11. Magha Purnima
  12. Phalguna Purnima – Holi

Lunar and lunisolar calendars

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The December 2015 full moon coincided with Christmas.[47] This last occurred in 1977 (for the American timezones). A small horizontal libration is visible comparing their appearances. By the 19-year metonic cycle the full moon will repeat on Christmas Day in 2034, 2053, 2072, and 2091.[48]

Most pre-modern calendars the world over were lunisolar, combining the solar year with the lunation by means of intercalary months.[49][50] The Julian calendar abandoned this method in favour of a purely solar reckoning while conversely the 7th-century Islamic calendar opted for a purely lunar one.

A continuing lunisolar calendar is the Hebrew calendar. Evidence of this is noted in the dates of Passover and Easter in Judaism and Christianity, respectively. Passover falls on the full moon on 15 Nisan of the Hebrew calendar. The date of the Jewish Rosh Hashana and Sukkot festivals along with all other Jewish holidays are dependent on the dates of the new moons.[51] Another continuing lunisolar calendar is the Chinese calendar, which places many of its most important festivals, such as Chinese New Year, the Dragon Boat Festival, and the Mid-Autumn Festival, according to lunisolar dates.

Intercalary months

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In lunisolar calendars, an intercalary month occurs seven times in the 19 years of the Metonic cycle, or on average every 2.7 years (19/7). In the Hebrew calendar this is noted with a periodic extra month of Adar in the early spring. The Chinese calendar, by contrast, can place its intercalary month anywhere in the year, and does so based on finding the first month within a thirteen-month winter-solstice-to-winter-solstice period to include no major solar term.

Meetings arranged to coincide with full moon

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Before the days of good street lighting and car headlights, several organisations arranged their meetings for full moon, so that it would be easier for their members to walk, or ride home. Examples include the Lunar Society of Birmingham, several Masonic societies, including Warren Lodge No. 32, USA and Masonic Hall, York, Western Australia, and several New Zealand local authorities, including Awakino,[52] Ohura[53] and Whangarei County Councils[54] and Maori Hill[55] and Wanganui East Borough Councils.[56]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A full moon is the lunar phase occurring when Earth lies between the Sun and the Moon, positioning the Moon opposite the Sun in the sky and fully illuminating the Earth-facing hemisphere of the Moon from our perspective.[1] This alignment results in approximately 100% of the Moon's visible disk being lit by direct sunlight, creating the appearance of a complete circle of light.[2] The full moon phase technically lasts only an instant but appears substantially full—over 98% illuminated—for about a day before and after the exact moment, spanning roughly three nights in total.[1] Full moons occur once every 29.5 days, aligning with the synodic month that defines the Moon's complete cycle of phases, and they rise near sunset while setting near sunrise, maximizing nighttime visibility across the globe.[2] The Moon's angular diameter varies by up to about 12% and its brightness by up to about 30% due to its elliptical orbit around Earth, with no dependence on the phase itself.[2] This phase is one of eight in the lunar cycle, following the waxing gibbous and preceding the waning gibbous, and it enables total lunar eclipses up to two or three times per year when the alignment is precise enough for Earth's shadow to fall on the Moon.[3][1] Beyond astronomy, full moons hold significant cultural and historical roles, with many societies assigning seasonal names to them based on natural events, agriculture, or wildlife behavior, such as the January Wolf Moon (linked to howling wolves in winter), the February Snow Moon (named for the heavy snowfalls typical of that month in the northeastern United States, originating from Indigenous North American tribes), or the September Harvest Moon (the full moon nearest the autumnal equinox, aiding late-season farming with its reliable rise times).[3][4] These names, often rooted in Indigenous North American traditions and later adopted in European almanacs, reflect how full moons have guided calendars, festivals, and rituals worldwide, including influencing the date of Easter in Christianity.[3] Notable variants include the supermoon, when a full moon coincides with perigee (the Moon's closest approach to Earth), making it appear up to 14% larger and 30% brighter than average, and the blue moon, the second full moon in a calendar month, which happens about every 2.7 years.[5][6]

Definition and Observation

Definition in Lunar Phases

The full moon is the lunar phase in which the Moon is positioned directly opposite the Sun relative to Earth, resulting in the entire near side of the Moon being fully illuminated by sunlight as observed from our planet.[2] This opposition places Earth between the Moon and the Sun, maximizing the visible illuminated portion of the Moon's disk.[7] This phase forms part of the Moon's synodic cycle, which is the period required for the Moon to complete one full sequence of phases as seen from Earth, averaging approximately 29.53 days.[7] The full moon occurs roughly midway through this cycle, following the new moon and preceding the waning phases.[2] Astronomically, the full moon is defined as the instant when the geocentric ecliptic longitudes of the Moon and the Sun differ by exactly 180 degrees.[7] Due to this alignment, the full moon typically rises near sunset, remains visible throughout the night, and sets around sunrise, reaching its highest point in the sky at or near midnight.[2]

Visibility and Apparent Characteristics

During a full moon, the entire visible disk of the Moon is illuminated by direct sunlight, appearing nearly 100% lit from Earth's perspective.[8] This full illumination makes the Moon the second-brightest object in the night sky after the Sun, with an apparent magnitude of approximately -12.6.[9][10] The Moon's brightness is further enhanced by the opposition surge, a phenomenon where its reflectivity sharply increases as the phase angle approaches zero degrees, resulting in more than a 40% boost in brightness compared to slightly earlier phases.[11] Observers notice this surge as the Moon reaches exact opposition, when it is directly opposite the Sun in the sky, making it appear exceptionally vivid.[12] Atmospheric conditions also influence the full Moon's appearance. During moonrise or moonset, light from the Moon passes through a thicker layer of Earth's atmosphere, where scattering preferentially removes shorter blue wavelengths, imparting a reddish or orange hue similar to sunset colors.[13] Atmospheric refraction additionally lifts the Moon's image slightly above the true horizon, aiding visibility but contributing to color shifts.[13] A prominent perceptual effect is the Moon illusion, where the full Moon appears significantly larger when low on the horizon than when high overhead, despite subtending the same angular size in both positions.[13] This illusion arises from cognitive factors, such as the brain interpreting the horizon Moon as farther away due to surrounding landscape cues, prompting a size adjustment to maintain perceived constancy.[13] Even in areas affected by urban light pollution, the full Moon remains readily visible to observers, as its intense brightness overwhelms much of the artificial skyglow, though it can still interfere with viewing fainter celestial objects.[14]

Astronomical Aspects

Phase Cycle Mechanics

The lunar phase cycle arises from the interplay between the Moon's orbit around Earth and Earth's orbit around the Sun, with the Sun illuminating one half of the Moon at all times. As the Moon revolves around Earth approximately every 27.3 days relative to the fixed stars, the angle between the Earth-Moon line and the Earth-Sun line changes, altering the fraction of the Moon's illuminated hemisphere visible from Earth. This results in a sequence of phases over the synodic month of about 29.53 days, beginning with the new moon when the Moon is aligned between Earth and the Sun, progressing through waxing crescent, first quarter, and waxing gibbous as the illuminated portion grows, reaching full moon, then waning gibbous, last quarter, and waning crescent as the illuminated area diminishes before returning to new moon.[2][7] In this cycle, the full moon represents the midpoint of the illuminated half, occurring when the Moon is in opposition to the Sun with respect to Earth, such that the entire hemisphere facing Earth is fully lit by sunlight. At this stage, the terminator—the boundary between the Moon's day and night sides—coincides with the limb of the Moon as viewed from Earth, rendering it invisible and presenting a uniformly bright disk. The waxing phases build toward this opposition over roughly 14.77 days, while the waning phases follow symmetrically, completing the cycle's return to conjunction at new moon. This opposition geometry ensures the full moon rises at sunset and sets at sunrise, maximizing its nighttime visibility.[2] The Moon's orbital plane is inclined by 5.145 degrees relative to the ecliptic (Earth's orbital plane around the Sun), which introduces slight variations in the Moon's path across the sky and affects the precise timing of phase transitions due to observational geometry from Earth's tilted axis. This inclination allows for highly predictable phase occurrences over the synodic cycle, as the Moon's latitude relative to the ecliptic shifts gradually, but it also means that full moons appear at different declinations each month, influencing their altitude and duration of visibility from specific latitudes on Earth.[7][2] While the phase cycle is governed by the synodic month—the time for the Moon to return to the same phase relative to the Sun—the anomalistic month of 27.55 days describes the interval between successive perigees (closest approach to Earth) in the Moon's elliptical orbit. This shorter period influences the Moon's varying distance from Earth, causing full moons near perigee to appear brighter and larger (supermoons), but it does not directly alter the progression or timing of phases, which remain tied to the synodic framework.[7]

Mathematical Determination of Dates

The mathematical determination of full moon dates relies on calculating the instant when the Moon's ecliptic longitude exceeds the Sun's by exactly 180°, defining the opposition phase. The lunar phase angle ϕ\phi is given by ϕ=(λ\moonλ\sun)mod360\phi = (\lambda_\moon - \lambda_\sun) \mod 360^\circ, where λ\moon\lambda_\moon and λ\sun\lambda_\sun are the ecliptic longitudes of the Moon and Sun, respectively, and full moon occurs when ϕ180\phi \approx 180^\circ.[15] This geocentric opposition can be computed using algorithms that account for the synodic month of approximately 29.530588853 days, the interval between consecutive full moons.[16] A widely used method for predicting full moon dates is described in Jean Meeus' Astronomical Algorithms, which provides formulas for the Julian Date (JD) of the mean new moon, from which full moon times are derived by adding half a synodic cycle. The approximate JD for the nnth mean full moon is $ \mathrm{JD} = 2451550.1 + 29.530588853 \times n $, where nn is an integer cycle count starting from a reference epoch near January 2000, with adjustments for the observer's longitude.[17] More precise calculations introduce a time parameter T=n/1236.85T = n / 1236.85 (centuries from 2000) and polynomial corrections: JD=2451550.09766+29.530588861×n+0.00015437T20.000000150T3+0.00000000073T4\mathrm{JD} = 2451550.09766 + 29.530588861 \times n + 0.00015437 T^2 - 0.000000150 T^3 + 0.00000000073 T^4.[17] These base formulas yield the mean full moon but require additional terms to account for perturbations from Earth's elliptical orbit (via the eccentricity factor E=10.002516T0.0000074T2E = 1 - 0.002516 T - 0.0000074 T^2) and lunar anomalies, including sums of periodic sine functions of mean anomalies MM, MM' (perigee), FF (latitude), and Ω\Omega (node). For full moon (phase offset 0.5), the total correction is approximately 0.40614sinM+0.17302EsinM+0.01618sin2M+-0.40614 \sin M' + 0.17302 E \sin M + 0.01618 \sin 2M' + \dots (up to 25 terms for high accuracy, plus 14 additional lunar perturbations like 0.000325sinA10.000325 \sin A_1).[17] Such algorithms achieve errors under 0.3 minutes for dates between 1950 and 2050.[16] For practical determination of full moon dates in historical periods such as from 1834 to the present, authoritative online tools provide year-specific dates and times rather than a single exhaustive historical list. The U.S. Naval Observatory offers an authoritative moon phases calculator that generates precise dates and times (in UTC) for new moon, first quarter, full moon, and last quarter phases for any year from approximately 1700 onward.[18] Similarly, timeanddate.com provides moon phase calendars for any selectable year, including historical years back to at least the 1800s (e.g., entering 1834 displays full moon dates for that year), with optional location-based adjustments.[19] These are primary reliable sources for astronomical data. In ecclesiastical contexts, such as determining the Paschal full moon for Easter, approximations simplify these calculations using the golden number G=(Ymod19)+1G = (Y \mod 19) + 1, where YY is the year, to index a 19-year Metonic cycle and derive epacts (age of the Moon on January 1). This yields tabulated dates for the ecclesiastical full moon, which diverge from astronomical instants by up to several days due to tabular approximations rather than dynamic perturbations.[20] Discrepancies between astronomical full moons (precise opposition instant in Universal Time) and civil dates arise from time zone offsets and definitions: the civil full moon is typically the local calendar day containing the UTC instant or when the Moon rises fully illuminated, potentially shifting the date across zones near midnight. For instance, an opposition at 23:00 UTC on day DD may be day D+1D+1 in Asian time zones.[21]

Associated Celestial Events

Lunar eclipses occur exclusively during full moons, when the Earth positions itself between the Sun and the Moon, and the Moon passes near one of the two orbital nodes where the Moon's orbit intersects the ecliptic plane.[22] These events are classified into three types based on the extent of shadowing: total lunar eclipses, where the Moon fully enters Earth's umbral shadow; partial lunar eclipses, where only a portion of the Moon enters the umbra; and penumbral lunar eclipses, where the Moon passes only through the outer penumbral shadow, resulting in subtle dimming.[22] A notable example is the total lunar eclipse of March 13–14, 2025, visible primarily across the Americas, Europe, Africa, and parts of Asia, with totality lasting approximately 1 hour and 6 minutes centered around 06:58 UTC on March 14.[23][24] Supermoons take place when a full moon coincides with the Moon's perigee, its closest point to Earth in its elliptical orbit, causing the Moon to appear up to 14% larger in diameter and 30% brighter than an average full moon.[5] These events occur roughly every 14 months due to the 27.55-day anomalistic month aligning periodically with the lunar phases.[25] In 2025, three supermoons occur on October 7 (Harvest Moon), November 5 (Beaver Moon, the largest of the year), and December 4 (Cold Moon).[5] In contrast, micromoons happen when a full moon aligns with the Moon's apogee, its farthest point from Earth, making the Moon appear about 14% smaller than during a supermoon and roughly 6% smaller than an average full moon.[26] This size difference highlights the Moon's elliptical orbit but is often subtle to the unaided eye without direct comparison. During total lunar eclipses, the Moon can exhibit a reddish hue known as a blood moon, resulting from Rayleigh scattering in Earth's atmosphere, which filters out shorter blue wavelengths and allows longer red wavelengths to reach the lunar surface.[27] The recurrence of lunar eclipses, including blood moons, follows the saros cycle, a period of approximately 18 years and 11 days (precisely 6,585.3 days), during which similar eclipses repeat with slight shifts in visibility.[28]

Cultural and Traditional Significance

Historical Naming Conventions

Throughout history, various cultures have assigned names to full moons based on seasonal changes, agricultural cycles, and natural phenomena, serving as a practical way to mark time before standardized calendars. These names often derive from observable environmental cues, such as weather patterns, animal behaviors, or crop ripening, and reflect the etymological roots of indigenous and settler traditions. Documented in historical almanacs and ethnographic records, these conventions highlight how communities synchronized activities with lunar phases, with over 100 variations noted across North American sources alone.[29] In European traditions, particularly among Anglo-Saxon and medieval English communities, the full moon nearest the autumnal equinox—typically in September—is known as the Harvest Moon, named for its role in illuminating late-season crop gathering after sunset. This moon rises particularly early and remains visible longer than usual due to the moon's path being nearly perpendicular to the horizon at that time of year, providing extended light for farmers working into the night. The following October full moon, called the Hunter's Moon, derives its name from the hunting season that followed the harvest, when fields were cleared and game like deer became more visible under its bright glow; it similarly lingers low in the sky for optimal illumination.[30][31] Native American tribes, including the Algonquin, Ojibwe, Cree, and others, developed a rich array of names tied to regional ecologies and survival activities, often varying by tribe and sometimes numbering 12 or 13 per year to account for lunar discrepancies with solar seasons. For instance, the January full moon is commonly the Wolf Moon, referencing the howling of wolves during harsh winters, while February's Snow Moon, originating from Native American tribes in the northeastern United States, refers to the intense snowfalls typical of February in the Northern Hemisphere, symbolizing withdrawal, clarity, and renewal. In some contemporary spiritual and astrological interpretations, it is associated with introspection and trust. August's Sturgeon Moon commemorates the abundance of sturgeon fish in the Great Lakes and rivers, signaling a time of plentiful fishing. The December full moon is known as the Cold Moon, reflecting the onset of winter's intense cold and long nights, as observed in traditions of tribes such as the Mohawk and Cree. These names, passed down orally and later recorded by explorers like Jonathan Carver in the 1760s, underscore the tribes' close observation of nature for hunting, fishing, and planting.[29][32][31][4][33] Colonial American settlers adapted many Native American names into their own agricultural calendars, blending them with European influences to denote farming milestones, such as the Corn Moon in September for maize harvesting or the Planting Moon in May for sowing seeds. In Celtic traditions, preserved in ancient Irish and Welsh lore, names like the Singing Moon (September, linked to harvest songs) or the Ice Moon (February, for frozen waters) similarly emphasized seasonal transitions and folklore elements tied to the land. Chinese historical naming, rooted in the lunar calendar, includes poetic designations like the Peony Moon (April, for blooming flowers) and the Lotus Moon (June, for aquatic blooms), with the August full moon—falling on the 15th day of the seventh lunar month—central to the Mid-Autumn Festival as a symbol of reunion and harvest abundance. Across these systems, the names' etymologies consistently prioritize practical, seasonal relevance over astronomical precision.[29][31][34]

Folklore and Superstitions

In Western folklore, the full moon is often linked to supernatural transformations, particularly the myth of the werewolf, where individuals are believed to shapeshift into wolves or wolf-like creatures under its light. This association appears in European tales dating back to medieval times, with the full moon's brightness symbolizing a trigger for the curse. The term "lunacy," derived from the Latin "luna" meaning moon, reflects ancient beliefs that the full moon induced madness or erratic behavior by affecting the brain's moisture, as described by Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder in the first century AD. A 2013 study published in Current Biology provided some scientific backing to lunar influence on human behavior, finding that during the full moon, deep non-REM sleep decreased by 30% and total sleep time shortened by about 20 minutes among participants in a controlled lab setting, potentially contributing to perceptions of restlessness or disrupted cognition. Across global traditions, the full moon features prominently in diverse folklore. In Chinese mythology, the Jade Rabbit (Yùtù) is a legendary figure residing on the moon, depicted as pounding elixir of immortality with a mortar and pestle, a motif visible in the moon's dark markings and symbolizing self-sacrifice after offering itself as food to a hungry deity. African folklore varies by region but often portrays the moon as embodying lunar spirits or deities tied to fertility and life cycles; for instance, among West African groups like the Ewe and Fon, the moon goddess Mawu represents creation and renewal, with her full phase seen as a time of heightened spiritual presence and communal harmony. Native American tales, particularly from Algonquian tribes, personify the October full moon as the Hunter's Moon, a luminous guide that illuminates the night for successful hunts during the fattening season before winter, emphasizing the moon's role in sustenance and survival. The full moon's mystique extends into modern popular culture, influencing literature, film, and persistent pseudoscientific claims. William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream (c. 1595) famously equates the "lunatic" with imaginative frenzy in the line "The lunatic, the lover, and the poet / Are of imagination all compact," drawing on longstanding moon-madness tropes to explore human folly. In cinema, the full moon trope dominates horror genres, from Universal's The Wolf Man (1941) onward, reinforcing werewolf lore as a staple of supernatural suspense. However, beliefs in full moon-induced spikes in crime have been widely debunked; meta-analyses of dozens of studies, including police records from multiple countries, show no statistical correlation between lunar phases and increased criminal activity, attributing the myth to confirmation bias rather than evidence. Historically, the full moon's gravitational pull on ocean tides fostered beliefs in analogous "tides" of human emotions and physiology, leading to associations with heightened passion, fertility, and even childbirth. Ancient and medieval cultures, from Greek to medieval European, viewed the moon's influence on bodily fluids as amplifying emotional intensity or aiding conception, with some traditions claiming more babies are born under its fullness due to tidal effects on amniotic fluid.

Religious and Festival Observances

In many religious traditions, the full moon symbolizes completeness, enlightenment, and spiritual fulfillment, serving as an auspicious time for rituals that emphasize purity and divine connection.[35] This lunar phase aligns observances with natural cycles, highlighting themes of wholeness and renewal across Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Islam, and contemporary Pagan practices. In Hinduism, Purnima—the full moon day—marks significant festivals dedicated to reverence and celebration. Guru Purnima, observed on the full moon of the Hindu month of Ashadha (typically July or August), honors spiritual teachers or gurus, commemorating the transmission of sacred knowledge from ancient sages like Vyasa, the compiler of the Vedas.[36] Devotees perform rituals such as fasting, prayers, and offerings to express gratitude for guidance toward enlightenment. Kartik Purnima, falling on the full moon of Kartika (usually November), is known as the festival of lights, akin to Dev Deepavali, where lamps are lit along rivers like the Ganges to symbolize the victory of light over darkness and to invoke divine blessings for prosperity.[37] Bathing in holy waters and worshipping deities like Vishnu or Shiva are central practices on this day. Buddhist traditions similarly revere the full moon through Uposatha observances, quarterly days of intensified meditation, ethical reflection, and precept-keeping that occur on the full and new moons, as well as the two quarter moons, to foster mindfulness and community harmony.[38] Vesak, the most prominent full moon festival, celebrated on the full moon of Vesakha (typically in May), commemorates the birth, enlightenment, and parinirvana (final passing) of Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha.[38] Practitioners engage in processions, lantern lighting, and acts of merit, such as releasing animals or sharing vegetarian meals, to honor these milestones; in 2025, Vesak falls on May 12.[39] Judaism times Passover to the full moon of Nisan, the first month of the ecclesiastical year, which begins shortly after the vernal equinox to ensure the festival occurs in spring.[40] This alignment, rooted in the Torah's command for the holiday on the 15th of Nisan, evokes the Israelites' exodus from Egypt under a full moon, symbolizing liberation and renewal through the Seder meal and rituals retelling the story of redemption. In Islam, the month of Dhul-Hijjah, the final lunar month, culminates in Eid al-Adha on the 10th day, near the full moon phase, commemorating Prophet Ibrahim's willingness to sacrifice his son in obedience to God.[41] The festival involves animal sacrifice (Qurbani), shared meals, and prayers, emphasizing devotion, charity, and community; in 2025, it is expected on June 6 following the moon sighting.[41] Pagan and Neopagan traditions, particularly Wicca, observe Esbats—monthly full moon gatherings—for rituals that invoke the Goddess's energy at its peak, focusing on healing, divination, and personal empowerment.[42] These solitary or coven-based ceremonies often include casting circles, chanting, and spellwork under the moonlight to harness its symbolic potency for manifestation and spiritual growth.

Calendrical and Practical Applications

Role in Lunar and Lunisolar Systems

In lunar calendars, months are defined by the synodic cycle of the Moon, typically beginning with the sighting of the new crescent moon shortly after conjunction, positioning the full moon as the approximate midpoint around the 14th or 15th day of the month.[43] This structure ensures that the full moon serves as a reliable visual marker for the passage of half a lunar month, facilitating communal and ritual timing in pre-modern societies. The Islamic calendar exemplifies this system, consisting of 12 lunar months totaling approximately 354 days per year, with no intercalation to align with the solar year, causing it to drift through the seasons over a 33-year cycle.[44] In this calendar, the full moon's prominence underscores its role as a natural anchor for timekeeping, independent of solar observations.[43] Lunisolar calendars integrate lunar months with the solar year to maintain seasonal synchronization, often using the full moon's alignment as a key reference for defining festival dates within the lunar framework. The Hebrew calendar, a calculated lunisolar system in use since the 4th century CE, structures its months around the new moon but aligns major observances, such as Passover on the 15th of Nisan, with the full moon phase.[43] Similarly, the Chinese calendar employs precise astronomical computations of the Sun and Moon to form lunisolar months starting at the new moon, with the full moon on the 15th day serving as a pivotal point for traditional alignments, ensuring the calendar's harmony with both celestial bodies.[43] These systems highlight the full moon's function in bridging lunar periodicity with annual solar cycles, preventing excessive drift from agricultural seasons.[44] Historically, the full moon played a central role in ancient calendrical systems as a visible and predictable marker for month progression and seasonal tracking. The Babylonian calendar, a lunisolar framework from the 2nd millennium BCE, relied on lunar phases for month beginnings observed via the western horizon crescent, with full moons acting as critical mid-month indicators for administrative and religious purposes.[44] In Mesoamerican traditions, the Maya incorporated lunar counts in their Long Count system, recording the age of the Moon in days since the last new moon through the Lunar Series on monuments and codices, where full moon occurrences (around day 14 of a lunation) were integral to grouping cycles of six months totaling 177 or 178 days.[45] Overall, the full moon's consistent visibility provided pre-modern cultures with an accessible celestial anchor for timekeeping, enabling the construction of calendars that balanced lunar rhythms with practical needs like farming and navigation.[43]

Intercalary Month Adjustments

Intercalary months are periodically added to lunisolar calendars to reconcile the shorter lunar year of approximately 354 days with the solar year of about 365 days, thereby preventing the seasonal drift of full moon dates by roughly 11 days per year. Without such adjustments, full moons would gradually shift earlier relative to the seasons, causing festivals tied to lunar phases, such as the Jewish Passover or the Christian Easter, to occur out of their intended seasonal contexts.[46][47] In the Hebrew calendar, an extra month known as Adar II is inserted as the 13th month during leap years, occurring seven times within a 19-year cycle—specifically in years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17, and 19—to align the 235 lunar months with 19 solar years and ensure spring festivals like Passover remain in their proper season. This practice, formalized around 358–359 CE by Hillel II, follows rules established by rabbinic authorities to maintain synchronization with the agricultural and equinox-based cycles described in Deuteronomy 16:1.[48][49] Similarly, the Chinese lunisolar calendar incorporates a leap month approximately every two to three years, designated by repeating the name of the preceding month (e.g., a second sixth month) when a lunar month lacks a major solar term, such as the winter solstice or other principal markers among the 24 solar terms. This adjustment, which happens seven times in a 19-year period, ensures that lunar events like the Mid-Autumn Festival align with seasonal changes, preventing drift in a calendar that tracks both moon phases and solar progression. For instance, in 2025, a leap month falls after the sixth lunar month, ending on August 22.[50][51] The Metonic cycle underpins these intercalations, providing a 19-year period in which 235 synodic lunar months (each about 29.53 days) closely match 19 tropical solar years (totaling 6,939.60 days for the solar period versus 6,939.69 days for the lunar), requiring seven extra months to achieve near-perfect alignment with an error of just over two hours. Discovered by the Greek astronomer Meton in the 5th century BCE, this cycle allows calendars to predict and insert intercalary months systematically, keeping full moons in consistent seasonal positions.[43][52] Algorithms employing epacts and golden numbers further refine these predictions, particularly for determining the full moon's proximity to equinoxes in calendars like the Gregorian. The golden number, ranging from 1 to 19 and calculated as (year modulo 19) + 1, tracks the position within the Metonic cycle to identify the date of the Paschal full moon—the ecclesiastical full moon on or after March 21. The epact, representing the moon's age at the year's start or on March 22, is derived from the golden number (e.g., Julian epact = (11 × (golden number – 1)) modulo 30) and adjusted in the Gregorian system using solar and lunar equations to account for calendar drift. These tools ensure accurate computation of dates like Easter, the first Sunday after the Paschal full moon, avoiding misalignment with the vernal equinox.[20][53][47]

Scheduled Human Activities

Throughout history, human activities have been scheduled around full moons to leverage the enhanced nighttime illumination for practical purposes, such as travel and resource gathering in eras without widespread electric lighting. Full moons provided sufficient light equivalent to about 0.1 to 0.3 lux, allowing safer navigation on land and sea compared to darker phases.[54] In pre-modern societies, this visibility facilitated group migrations, trade caravans, and community assemblies, reducing risks from uneven terrain or nocturnal hazards.[55] Coastal and island communities often timed fishing and harvesting expeditions to full moons due to the coinciding spring tides, which produce the highest high tides and lowest low tides of the lunar cycle. These tides, resulting from the alignment of the sun, moon, and earth, expose extensive intertidal zones, making shellfish like clams and oysters more accessible for collection. For instance, Indigenous groups along the Pacific Northwest coast historically planned such harvests during full moon periods to maximize yields without advanced tools.[56] Similarly, in tropical regions, fishers exploited the clearer waters and increased activity of marine life stirred by stronger currents during these tides.[57] In the modern era, secular events continue to align with full moons for logistical advantages in outdoor settings. The Full Moon Party on Ko Pha-ngan, Thailand, held monthly since the 1980s, draws tens of thousands to Haad Rin Beach, where the natural moonlight enables large-scale dancing and activities without heavy reliance on generators or artificial lights.[58] Surfing competitions, such as Red Bull Night Riders, are explicitly scheduled under full moons to provide enough visibility for nighttime waves, as seen in events where professionals ride illuminated swells in locations like Australia and Hawaii. Astronomy outreach programs frequently organize full moon observations and hikes, capitalizing on the moon's brightness for public engagement without telescopes, as hosted by institutions like the Royal Observatory. In space exploration, NASA deliberately avoided full moon phases for Apollo lunar landings to prevent glare from overhead sunlight, which would wash out shadows and hinder site assessment; instead, missions like Apollo 11 targeted waxing crescent phases for optimal 5-14° sun angles and terrain visibility.[59] International organizations occasionally align sessions near full moons for symbolic completeness or enhanced evening logistics, such as the 2025 UN Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Belém, Brazil, held from November 10-21 shortly after the November 5 full moon, facilitating outdoor discussions on environmental sustainability under clear night skies.[60]

References

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