When you鈥檙e looking at a Moon that鈥檚 half-illuminated鈥攍ike half a pie鈥攚hy is it called a 鈥quarter Moon鈥 instead of a 鈥渉alf Moon鈥? Seems confusing, right? Astronomer Bob Berman explains this Moon phase, which he finds the most interesting of all!
Why Do We Call It the Quarter Moon?
We鈥檝e all looked up at the night sky and seen half of the Moon鈥檚 disk illuminated. If you had two half Moons and fit them together, you鈥檇 get a full Moon. But when you鈥檙e looking at a Half Moon, the official name is 鈥淨uarter Moon.鈥 There鈥檚 no half-moon phase, at least not in any official way. But it appears half-illuminated. This may seem odd, but let me explain.
Think of the Moon going around the Earth as a runner going around baseball plates (first base, etc.).
- Earth is the pitcher. When the runner hits the ball, it goes to first base (one-quarter of the way around). Similarly, at the Quarter Moon, the Moon is one-quarter of the way through its orbit.
- Then, the runner goes to second base (halfway around), then to third base (three-quarters around). The Moon is three-quarters of the way through its orbital cycle and, therefore, is called the Third Quarter Moon.
At the first base or third base, you get the quarter Moons.
First Quarter vs. Third Quarter
With the Quarter Moon鈥攚hich looks like half the Moon鈥攚e can see about 50% of the Moon鈥檚 face illuminated from Earth. (Technically, it鈥檚 slightly more than 50%, but who鈥檚 counting.)
Sometimes, it also gets confusing to remember which 鈥淨uarter鈥 we are seeing:
- The Moon appears lit on the right half of the Moon during the First Quarter.
- The Moon appears lit on the left side during the Third Quarter because the Moon is on the other side of Earth.
Again, if you think of the baseball analogy, and you鈥檙e standing at home plate, the first base or First Quarter is on your right side. The third base or Third Quarter is on your side.
The First Quarter happens around day 7 of a Moon鈥檚 cycle (one week after the New Moon), and the Third Quarter usually happens around day 22 (three weeks after the New Moon).
See the 蜜桃恋人鈥檚 Moon Phase Calendar.
Why the Quarter Moons Are Special
To me, the Quarter Moon is much more interesting than the Full Moon. This is the Moon that鈥檚 at its highest at sunset, just around dinner time.
While the Full Moon provides a lot of light on Earth, if you鈥檙e observing the Moon鈥檚 surface, most beginning astronomers can鈥檛 see much beyond the blinding orb. The Sun then shines straight down like a flash camera to erase all shadows and highlights.
First Quarter Moon
But take a look at the Quarter Moon. The First Quarter Moon is the 鈥淗alf Moon鈥 that we see most.
The shadowing is perfect. You see all the mountains and craters. It鈥檚 fascinating to look at. The First Quarter Moon explodes with breathtaking detail for anyone with binoculars, spotting scope, or even the smallest telescope.
Last Quarter Moon
With the Last Quarter Moon, the left half appears to be lit up by sunshine, and the rest is immersed in shadow.
It doesn鈥檛 even rise until midnight and is not at its highest until around dawn. Who鈥檚 up then? Nobody! Most of us don鈥檛 want to haul our telescopes out at 5 A.M. or 6 A.M. to look at the Half Moon when you could look at the 鈥渙ther Half Moon鈥 (the First Quarter Moon) at six in the evening when it鈥檚 convenient. Everyone鈥檚 used to the First Quarter Moon.
More Cool Quarter Moon Facts
The Quarter Moon aims its terminator, the day-night line that is home to all the juicy detail, straight at us. It lies directly ahead of us as Earth is zooming through the universe. This means highlighted craters then face you like actors hamming it up, instead of pointing, foreshortened, in other directions the way the rest of the lunar phases do.
You鈥檇 think a Half Moon would be half as bright as a Full Moon, right? Oddly enough, a Half Moon is only one-tenth as bright as a Full Moon. Yet why does it seem so bright? This is because the Full Moon throws sunlight straight back at us like a movie screen, while the First Quarter鈥檚 sideways illumination creates innumerable unseen shadows on the Moon鈥檚 powdery surface.
How to Best View the Quarter Moon
Point the cheapest telescope towards the Quarter Moon. Stay below 60 power and the entire Moon will fill the field like a scene from 2001.
Even ordinary binoculars reveal the lunar Apennines, that mountain range just above dead center, whose jagged Himalaya-sized peaks tower straight up at you like skyscrapers.
Then there鈥檚 the badlands, the southern region, crazily pockmarked with a generous sampling of the 30,000 craters visible from Earth.
The scene changes dramatically each night as the terminator slithers over the Moon鈥檚 surface at 10 miles per hour. (A lunar jogger with enough stamina could keep nightfall at bay!)
Yes, this is a Moon phase packed with misconceptions. Even its name is misleading: how many realize that the Quarter Moon is the same thing as a Half Moon?