Jump to:
- How to see the full moon
- 2024 full moon dates
- Full moon names
- Moon phases explained
- Lunar Eclipses
- Solar Eclipses
- Additional resources
When is the next full moon?
The next full moon will be on Friday, Nov. 15. It will officially reach its full moon phase at 4:29 p.m. EDT (2129 GMT). The moon will still appear full the night before and after its peak to the casual stargazer.
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November's full moon will appear slightly larger than normal and is known as a supermoon. Supermoons occur when the full moon coincides with the moon being at the point in its orbit within 90% of its closest approach to Earth, called Perigee. November's supermoon will be the last of four supermoons in a row this year.
Most of the time, the full moon isn't perfectly full. We always see the same side of the moon, but part of it is in shadow, due to the moon's rotation. Only when the moon, Earth and the sun are perfectly aligned is the moon 100% full.
And sometimes — once in a blue moon — the moon is full twice in a month (or four times in a season, depending on which definition you prefer).
If you want to know what you can see tonight check out our night sky live blog or if you want to plan further ahead our monthly skywatching guide highlights key targets for the month.
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How to see the full moon
Fancy taking a more in-depth moonlit tour of our rocky companion? Our ultimate guide to observing the moon will help you plan your next skywatching venture whether it be exploring the lunar seas, mountainous terrain, or the many craters that blanket the landscape. You can also see where astronauts, rovers and landers have ventured with our Apollo landing sites observing guide.
You can prepare for the next full moon or eclipse with our guides on how to photograph the moon and how to photograph a lunar eclipse. If you need imaging gear, consider our best cameras for astrophotography and best lenses for astrophotography to ensure you're ready for your next skywatching venture.
If you're looking for binoculars or a telescope to observe the moon, check out our guides for the best binoculars and best telescopes.
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2024 full moon dates
This is when full moons will occur in 2024, according to NASA:
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Date | Name | U.S. Eastern Time | GMT |
---|---|---|---|
January 25 | Wolf Moon | 12:54 p.m. | 17:54 |
February 24 | Snow Moon | 7:30 a.m. | 12:30 |
March 25 | Worm Moon | 3:00 a.m. | 07:00 |
April 23 | Pink Moon | 7:49 p.m. | 23:49 |
May 23 | Flower Moon | 9:53 a.m. | 13:53 |
June 21 | Strawberry Moon | 9:08 p.m. | 01:08 on June 22 |
July 21 | Buck Moon | 6:17 a.m. | 10:17 |
August 19 | Sturgeon Moon | 2:26 p.m. | 18:26 |
September 17 | Harvest Moon | 10:34 p.m. | 02:34 on Sept. 18 |
October 17 | Hunter's Moon | 7:26 a.m. | 11:26 |
November 15 | Beaver Moon | 4:29 p.m. | 21:29 |
December 15 | Cold Moon | 4:02 a.m. | 09:02 |
The 2024 full moon names explained
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Many cultures have given distinct names to each month's full moon. The names were applied to the entire month in which each occurred. The Farmer's Almanac lists several names that are commonly used in the United States. There are some variations in the moon names, but in general, the same ones were used among the Algonquin tribes from New England on west to Lake Superior. European settlers followed their own customs and created some of their own names.
Other Native American people had different names. In the book "This Day in North American Indian History" (Da Capo Press, 2002), author Phil Konstantin lists more than 50 native peoples and their names for full moons. He also lists them on his website, AmericanIndian.net.
Amateur astronomer Keith Cooley has a brief list of the moon names of other cultures, including Chinese and Celtic, on his website.
Chinese moon names:
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Month | Name | Month | Name |
---|---|---|---|
January | Holiday Moon | July | Hungry Ghost Moon |
February | Budding Moon | August | Harvest Moon |
March | Sleepy Moon | September | Chrysanthemum Moon |
April | Peony Moon | October | Kindly moon |
May | Dragon Moon | November | White Moon |
June | Lotus Moon | December | Bitter Moon |
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— What you can see in this month's night sky
— The moon: 10 surprising facts
Full moon names often correspond to seasonal markers, so a Harvest Moon occurs at the end of the growing season, in September or October, and the Cold Moon occurs in frosty December. At least, that's how it works in the Northern Hemisphere.
In the Southern Hemisphere, where the seasons are switched, the Harvest Moon occurs in March and the Cold Moon is in June. According to Earthsky.org, these are common names for full moons south of the equator.
January: Hay Moon, Buck Moon, Thunder Moon, Mead Moon
February (mid-summer): Grain Moon, Sturgeon Moon, Red Moon, Wyrt Moon, Corn Moon, Dog Moon, Barley Moon
March: Harvest Moon, Corn Moon
April: Harvest Moon, Hunter’s Moon, Blood Moon
May: Hunter’s Moon, Beaver Moon, Frost Moon
June: Oak Moon, Cold Moon, Long Night’s Moon
July: Wolf Moon, Old Moon, Ice Moon
August: Snow Moon, Storm Moon, Hunger Moon, Wolf Moon
September: Worm Moon, Lenten Moon, Crow Moon, Sugar Moon, Chaste Moon, Sap Moon
October: Egg Moon, Fish Moon, Seed Moon, Pink Moon, Waking Moon
November: Corn Moon, Milk Moon, Flower Moon, Hare Moon
December: Strawberry Moon, Honey Moon, Rose Moon
The phases of the moon explained
The moon is a sphere that travels once around Earth every 27.3 days. It also takes about 27 days for the moon to rotate on its axis. So, the moon always shows us the same face; there is no single "dark side" of the moon. As the moon revolves around Earth, it is illuminated from varying angles by the sun — what we see when we look at the moon is reflected sunlight. On average, the moon rises about 50 minutes later each day, which means sometimes it rises during daylight and other times at night.
There are four phases of the moon, new moon, first quarter moon, full moon and third quarter moon.
At new moon, the moon is between Earth and the sun, so that the side of the moon facing toward us receives no direct sunlight, and is lit only by dim sunlight reflected from Earth.
A few days later, as the moon moves around Earth, the side we can see gradually becomes more illuminated by direct sunlight. This thin sliver is called the waxing crescent.
A week after the new moon, the moon is 90 degrees away from the sun in the sky and is half-illuminated from our point of view — what we call first quarter because it is about a quarter of the way around Earth.
A few days later, the area of illumination continues to increase. More than half of the moon's face appears to be getting sunlight. This phase is called a waxing gibbous moon.
When the moon has moved 180 degrees from its new moon position, the sun, Earth and the moon form a line. The moon’s disk is as close as it can be to being fully illuminated by the sun, so this is called full moon.
Next, the moon moves until more than half of its face appears to be getting sunlight, but the amount is decreasing. This is the waning gibbous phase.
Days later, the moon has moved another quarter of the way around Earth, to the third quarter position. The sun's light is now shining on the other half of the visible face of the moon.
Next, the moon moves into the waning crescent phase as less than half of its face appears to be getting sunlight, and the amount is decreasing.
Finally, the moon moves back to its new moon starting position. Because the moon’s orbit is not exactly in the same plane as Earth’s orbit around the sun, they rarely are perfectly aligned. Usually the moon passes above or below the sun from our vantage point, but occasionally it passes right in front of the sun, and we get an eclipse of the sun.
Each full moon is calculated to occur at an exact moment, which may or may not be near the time the moon rises where you are. So when a full moon rises, it’s typically doing so some hours before or after the actual time when it’s technically full, but a casual skywatcher won’t notice the difference. In fact, the moon will often look roughly the same on two consecutive nights surrounding the full moon.
Lunar eclipses of 2024
Lunar eclipses are inextricably tied to the full moon. To find out where and when you can see the next lunar eclipse check out our lunar eclipse guide.
When the moon is in its full phase, it passes behind the Earth with respect to the sun and can pass through Earth's shadow, creating a lunar eclipse. When the moon is fully inside the Earth's shadow, we see a total lunar eclipse. At other times, the moon only partially passes through the Earth's shadow in what is known as a partial, or even penumbral lunar eclipse (when the moon only skirts through the outermost region of Earth's shadow).
There are two lunar eclipses in 2024: A penumbral lunar eclipse occurred on March 25 and a partial lunar eclipse will occur on Sept. 17-18. Though neither will be particularly dramatic.
The penumbral lunar eclipse on March 25 was a very slight lunar eclipse in which the moon passed through the outermost edge of the Earth's shadow. It was visible from much of Europe, North and East Asia, North America, South America, the Arctic and Antarctica according to TimeandDate.com.
The penumbral eclipse began at 12:53 a.m. EDT (0453 GMT), the maximum stage of the eclipse occurred a couple of hours later at 3:12 a.m. EDT (0712 GMT) and the penumbral eclipse ended at 5:32 a.m. EDT (0932 GMT). The overall duration of the eclipse was 4 hours and 39 minutes.
The partial lunar eclipse on Sept. 17-18 will be visible over Europe, Much of Asia, Africa, North America, South America, the Pacific, the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean, the Arctic and Antarctica, according to TimeandDate.com.
It will begin at 8:41 p.m. EDT (0141 GMT on Sept. 18), the maximum point of the eclipse will occur at 10:44 p.m. EDT (0341 GMT on Sept. 18) and the partial lunar eclipse will end at 12:47 a.m. EDT on Sept. 18 (0547 GMT). The total duration of the partial lunar eclipse is 4 hours and 6 minutes.
Solar eclipses of 2024
When the moon is in its "new" phase, it passes between the Earth and the sun, so the side facing the Earth appears dark. To find out when and where you can see the next solar eclipse, check out our solar eclipse guide.
Occasionally, the moon's orbit lines up with the sun in such a way that part or all of the sun can be blocked by the moon, as viewed from Earth. When the moon completely blocks the sun's disk, we see a total solar eclipse during the day, which can be a truly awe-inspiring site. Other times, the moon can only partially block the sun in a partial solar eclipse.
The moon can even create a "ring of fire" solar eclipse when it passes directly in front of the sun, but is at a point in its orbit that is too far from Earth to fully cover the sun's disk. This leaves a ring, or "annulus," around the moon to create what is called an annular solar eclipse.
There are two solar eclipses in 2024: a total solar eclipse on April 8 and an annular solar eclipse on Oct. 2.
A total solar eclipse darkened skies over Mexico, the U.S. and Canada on April 8, 2024.
It came just six months after the impressive annular solar eclipse which swept across eight states in the U.S. Southwest as well as Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Brazil.
Read more: 14 of the best total solar eclipse 2024 photos from our readers
The second solar eclipse of 2024 will be an annular "ring of fire" solar eclipse visible in South America.
To be able to see all the phases of the eclipse including the famous "ring of fire" you must be located somewhere along the path of annularity which cuts through Argentina and Chile. Observers situated close to but outside the path of annularity will see a partial solar eclipse where the moon appears to take a "bite" out of the sun.
To keep up to date on all our solar eclipse coverage head to our solar eclipse live updates page.
More full moon and night sky resources
- NASA's Sky Events Calendar
- The 15 must-see skywatching events of 2024
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Tariq Malik
Editor-in-Chief
Tariq is the Editor-in-Chief of Space.com and joined the team in 2001, first as an intern and staff writer, and later as an editor. He covers human spaceflight, exploration and space science, as well as skywatching and entertainment. He became Space.com's Managing Editor in 2009 and Editor-in-Chief in 2019. Before joining Space.com, Tariq was a staff reporter for The Los Angeles Times covering education and city beats in La Habra, Fullerton and Huntington Beach. In October 2022, Tariq received the Harry Kolcum Award for excellence in space reporting from the National Space Club Florida Committee. He is also an Eagle Scout (yes, he has the Space Exploration merit badge) and went to Space Camp four times as a kid and a fifth time as an adult. He has journalism degrees from the University of Southern California and New York University. You can find Tariq at Space.com and as the co-host to the This Week In Space podcast with space historian Rod Pyle on the TWiT network. To see his latest project, you can follow Tariq onTwitter @tariqjmalik.
With contributions from
- Daisy DobrijevicReference Editor
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5 CommentsComment from the forums
PaulL The article states the full moon will occur Thursday, Dec. 12 at 12:12 a.m. EDT (5:12 UTC). I think you have a typo, unless this was supposed to be listed in Eastern DAYLIGHT Time?
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Simon Hi, this is one of the words I learned from Scrabble: syzygy. When these three objects line up, the exact moment for it happening does not need to be at any particular time of the day at your location.
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ni65512 hi i think moons are cool
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Catastrophe From Wiki Lunar month:
"Therefore, the synodic month takes 2.2 days longer than the sidereal month. Thus, about 13.37 sidereal months, but about 12.37 synodic months, occur in a Gregorian year."So in 36 calendar months, there are 40.11 sidereal months.
Alternatively, 1 mean year = 365.2425 days.
1 sidereal month = 29.531 days. Ratio 12,368 sidereal months/calendar year.Every 3 calendar years there are 37.10 sidereal months = 37.10 full moons.#
i.e., approx. 12 + 12 + 13 or two years of 12 full moons and one year of 13 full moons.Cat :)
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leokanavel hi
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