Moon Day 2024 is on Saturday, July 20, 2024: Day Moon: Natural Occurrence or Tool Of The Devil?

Saturday, July 20, 2024 is Moon Day 2024. Monday ( or ) is the day of the week between Sunday and Tuesday. According to the traditional Christian, Islamic and Hebrew calendars, it is the second day of the week.

In 2009, Moon Day was created

Monday ( or ) is the day of the week between Sunday and Tuesday. According to the traditional Christian, Islamic and Hebrew calendars, it is the second day of the week.

Day Moon: Natural Occurrence or Tool Of The Devil?

Day Moon: Natural Occurrence or Tool Of The Devil? : Natural (very)

How come the moon comes out during the day? : Moonrise & setting can be anytime of the day or night. (And who told you that Moon comes or should only come at night? )

Does this mean that other parts of the world don't get the moon & when they look up at the sky they just see a big black void? : When you see Moon they don't get to see it in parts behind the Earth where you stand. After 12 hours the situation reverses and they see Moon, while you don't. It is just like the Sun (half the world sees him & say 'it is day' while the other half says that it is night because there is no Sun in the sky).

Also if the sun is much bigger than the moon how come we don't see the sun at night? : Extremely silly of you. Did you forget the meaning of night? When the Sun goes out (sets), the night gets in till the Sun rises. This is the definition Man has given to 'night'. Naming is not any God's work. Where is the magic in it !Where is the scope for Sun to peep in at night? Aren't you being silly in saying it, contradicting your own self (I hope you call yourself a Man)? And which fool has given the name Day & Night based on Moon's presence rather than the Sun? All such (including you if you follow him) must be given a one-way ticket to Mars.

And also, if the sun is much bigger than the moon how come we don't see the sun at night? : Again I may draw your attention to a simple spectacle of an aircraft flying in sky with a crow also flying, appearing much bigger than the aircraft in sky. Just think about: How the airplane has suddenly become smaller than the crow. I think this is a wonder that a 3 year old can't understand but you, a grown up man & experienced should THINK (God has provided half a kilogram of a matter, in your cranium that you seem to be hardly using). I now understand what is the problem with the likes of you. You don't learn by experience, but by following any fool. If he says something you simply swallow it as Gospel truth. And he gets power over you & can use you too, because you don't pause and verify truth. If he says that day & night are determined by the Moon, you nod your chin up & down and say "Yes, sir, You are right".

Since you brought up the Devil, I bring up God. He provided you the Sun, the Moon & the Stars for your pleasure, amusement, study so as to enrich yourself with the knowledge and revel in it as a fulfilment of Life; not to be silly & unthinkingly brainless. Our visible world is in two parts. One above the horizon (Elevation : +) & the other below (Elevation : -). You seem to be seeing only what is below & the half above doesn't exist. Even if it does, is just a waste for you. Have you lifted your head & seen the sky (the other visible half of the viewable world) any time? No, you wallow in the muck below like the genus Porcus Porcus, while the sublime & beauteous goes unnoticed? The half above is provided by the God, damn it, for your sake! Do justice to God's creation, you being one.

OK. On next FullMoon. While the Sun sets in west, you'll (Lo and behold!) see the Moon in its fullness rising in the east. Notice it. Stretch your hands to each of them and you'll notice that the angle they make (between your stretched arms) is 180º. That is what Astronomers say & it seems Americans are good at these technological observations. Get up the next morning before sun rise & see again while the Sun rises in east, the Moon with all the fullness, is setting in west, just 24 minutes the Sunrise. See it the next day (a day after the FullMoon) while the Sun sets you may have to wait for 48 minutes for the (almost or near Full-) Moon to rise & set next morning 1 hour & 12 minutes before the Sunrise. The next day (2 days after the 'FullMoon', what we call "dwitiya" in India and not that Gibbous Moon & such crude Gibberish), the Moon rises 1 hour 36 minutes after Sunset, to set 2 hours before the Sunrise. Twelve days or so the Moon gets very near to the Sun setting just after him & rising just prior to him, but you can see a thin Crescent or not at all. By then by instinct you 'd know that the Moon is nearest to the Sun, in the same line. But since you see the unlit backside of the Moon, you can't expect to see it. But that is out of question as the Sun's glare prevents to see what little there can be. And don't (repeat "don't") ask anyone, but verify it for you. It is a rich learning experience that you ought to have done decades ago (never mind; it is never too late before one dies - to learn). It is all "FREE", doesn't cost a $dollar, not a dime & not even a ₡ent (but guaranteed to give full results, cent per cent). {you might be even an Astronomer, playing fun in Y!A. But your question made all this possible; read!}

Why lunar eclipse occur on full moon day?

Why lunar eclipse occur on full moon day?

Good knowledge about the full moon day phenomenon. But u slightly missed the chance.

Let me tell u.

Put a scale vertically , crossing the line joining the sun & moon, i.e. the sunrays path. now the earth crosses the line . Say the scale is having a zero on the point where the centre of the sunrays fall on moon centre. now sometimes earth crosses just above the zero, other times, just below the zero, so missing the earth's shadow to fall on the moon. Now when the earth crosses just touching the zero, the earth's shadow will definately fall on the moon & off course due to earth's big size & enormous distance from sun, as compared to that from moon, the moon will be fully covered with the shadow, even if the earth slightly misses the zero, the shadow may partially fall on the moon. The former condiotiomnois Full eclipse & latter one is partiall lunar eclipse.

you can refer to following links. This was an explanatioon by myself:

The following web page lists many of the cycles over which solar and lunar eclipses repeat, including the Saros and Inex:

Search 5,000 years of eclipse data by type, magnitude, Saros number, or simply by year on the following site:

(loads slowly)

Dr. Fred Espenak's eclipse site:

International Astronomical Union's Working Group on Solar Eclipses

Stunning Solar and Lunar Eclipse Sequences and Photos:

Interactive eclipse maps site:

Prof. Druckmüller's eclipse photography site:

Windows software for finding eclipse dates and times:

Williams College eclipse collection of images

Retrieved from ""

The Moon Seen In The Day?

The Moon Seen In The Day?

The Moon is in orbit around the Earth, and takes 29.5 days to complete its circle. This means that it passes the Sun in the sky once every 29.5 days (called New Moon) and then moves slowly away from the Sun until it's exactly opposite the Sun at Full Moon, two weeks later. At any point in these two weeks, you can see the Sun and the Moon in the afternoon sky at the same time. At Full Moon, the Moon rises in the east at exactly the same time as the Sun sets in the west, and that's the _only_ night in the whole month when the Moon is in the night sky all night long. After Full Moon, the Moon continues in its orbit, moving slowly towards the Sun on the opposite side, and again Sun and Moon can be seen at the same time in the morning sky. After another two weeks, the Moon approaches the Sun closely, and is lost in the Sun's glare for a few days. So, basically, having both the Sun and the Moon in the sky simultaneously is the normal thing, almost every day of the month, while having the Moon only in the night sky happens only one night a month.

The fact that so few people have observed the Moon and Sun in the sky at the same time merely confirms that most people rarely if ever look at the sky.

Holidays also on this date Saturday, July 20, 2024...