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New moon

The New Moon is the lunar phase Lunar phase

In astronomy [i], a lunar phase is any of the aspects or appearances presented by the Moon [i] as seen f ... 

 that occurs when the Moon, in its monthly orbital motion around Earth, lies between Earth and the Sun, and is therefore in conjunction with the Sun as seen from Earth. At this time, the illuminated half of the Moon faces directly toward the Sun, and the dark or unilluminated portion of the Moon faces directly toward Earth, so that the Moon is invisible as seen from Earth. New Moon is often considered to occur at the time of the appearance of the first visible crescent Crescent

In art and symbolism, a crescent is generally the shape produced when a circular [i] disk has a s ... 

 of the Moon Moon

The Moon is Earth [i]'s only natural satellite [i]. ... 

, after conjunction Conjunction (astronomy)

Conjunction is a term used in positional astronomy [i] and astrology [i]. ... 

 with the Sun Sun

|+ The Sun   |+ |- ... 

.

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Timeline

2000   A rare conjunction Conjunction (astronomy)

Conjunction is a term used in positional astronomy [i] and astrology [i]. ... 

 occurs on the New Moon, including all seven of the traditional celestial bodies known from ancient Ancient history

Ancient history is the study of significant cultural and political events from the beginning of human hi... 

 times up until 1781 with the discovery of Uranus Uranus

Uranus is the seventh planet [i] from the Sun [i]. ... 

. The May 2000 conjunction consisted of: the Sun Sun

|+ The Sun   |+ |- ... 

 and Moon Moon

The Moon is Earth [i]'s only natural satellite [i]. ... 

, Mercury Mercury (planet)

Mercury is the nearest planet to the sun [i], orbiting at an average distance of about 58 million kilome ... 

, Venus Venus

Venus is the second-closest planet [i] to the Sun [i], orbiting it every 224.7 Earth days. ... 

, Mars Mars

Mars is the fourth planet [i] from the Sun [i] in our solar system [i] and is named after Mars [i] ... 

, Jupiter Jupiter

Jupiter is the fifth planet [i] from the Sun [i] and the largest [i] within the solar system [i] ... 

, and Saturn Saturn

Saturn is the sixth planet [i] from the Sun [i]. ... 

.



Encyclopedia



The New Moon is the lunar phase Lunar phase

In astronomy [i], a lunar phase is any of the aspects or appearances presented by the Moon [i] as seen f ... 

 that occurs when the Moon, in its monthly orbital motion around Earth, lies between Earth and the Sun, and is therefore in conjunction with the Sun as seen from Earth. At this time, the illuminated half of the Moon faces directly toward the Sun, and the dark or unilluminated portion of the Moon faces directly toward Earth, so that the Moon is invisible as seen from Earth.

New Moon is often considered to occur at the time of the appearance of the first visible crescent Crescent

In art and symbolism, a crescent is generally the shape produced when a circular [i] disk has a s ... 

 of the Moon Moon

The Moon is Earth [i]'s only natural satellite [i]. ... 

, after conjunction Conjunction (astronomy)

Conjunction is a term used in positional astronomy [i] and astrology [i]. ... 

 with the Sun Sun

|+ The Sun   |+
|-
... 

. This takes place over the western horizon Horizon

The horizon is the line that separates earth [i] from sky [i]. ... 

 in a brief period between sunset Sunset

Sunset, also called sundown in some American English [i] dialect [i]s, is the time at which the Su ... 

 and moonset, and therefore the precise time and even the date of the appearance of the New Moon by this definition will be influenced by the geographical location of the observer. The astronomical New Moon, sometimes known as the dark moon to avoid confusion, occurs by definition at the moment of conjunction in ecliptic longitude with the Sun, when the Moon is invisible from the Earth. This moment is unique and does not depend on location, and under certain circumstances it may be coincident with a solar eclipse Eclipse

An is an astronomical event that occurs when one celestial object [i] moves into the shadow of another.
... 

.

The New Moon is the beginning of the month in lunar calendars such as the Muslim calendar, and in lunisolar calendars such as the Hebrew calendar Hebrew calendar

The Hebrew calendar or Jewish calendar is the annual calendar [i] used in Judaism [i]. ... 

, Buddhist calendar, and Chinese calendar.

Approximate formula

An approximate formula for the average time of New Moon N is

,

where D is the number of days since 2000-01-01 00:00:00 TT, and N is an integer.

To obtain this moment expressed in Universal Time  for future events , apply the following approximate correction:

days

Periodic perturbations change the time of true conjunction from these mean values. For all New Moons between 1601 and 2401, the maximum difference is 0.592 days = 14h13m in either direction.

The duration of a lunation varies in this period between 29.272 and 29.833 days, i.e. -0.259d = 6h12m shorter, or +0.302d = 7h15m longer than average. This range is smaller than the difference between mean and true conjunction, because during the lunation the periodic terms cannot all change to their maximum opposite value.

See the paper on the full moon cycle for a fairly simple method to compute the moment of New Moon more accurately.

The long-term error of the formula is approximately: 1*cy*cy seconds in TT, and 11*cy*cy seconds in UT

Explanation of the formulae

The moment of mean conjunction can easily be computed from an expression for the average ecliptic longitude of the Moon minus the average ecliptic longitude of the Sun . The expression given is based on the paper by Chapront et al. [2], with the following corrections:

constant term:

  • Applied the constant terms of the aberration to obtain the apparent difference in ecliptic longitudes:


Sun: +20.496"


Moon: -0.704"


Correction in conjunction: -0.000451 days.


  • For UT: at 1 Jan. 2000, ?T was +63.83 s; hence the correction for the clock time of the conjunction is:


-0.000739 days.


quadratic term:

  • In ELP2000–85 , D has a quadratic term of -5.8681"*T2; expressed in lunations N, this yields a correction of +87.403E–12*N2 days to the time of conjunction. The term includes a tidal contribution of 0.5*. The most current estimate from Lunar Laser Ranging is : "/cy2. Therefore the tidal correction to the quadratic term in D is -0.9817*T2". The polynomial provided by Chapront et al. provides the same value. This translates to a correction of +14.622E-12*N2 days; the quadratic term now is:


+102.026E-12*N2 days.


  • For UT: analysis of historical observations show that ?T has a long-term increase of +31 s/cy2. Converted to days and lunations, the correction from ET to UT becomes:


-235E-12*N2 days.


The theoretical tidal contribution to ?T is about +42 s/cy2; the smaller observed value is due to changes in the shape of the Earth. The uncertainty of our prediction of UT may be as large as the difference between these values: 11 s/cy2. The error in the position of the Moon itself is only maybe 0.5 "/cy2, or 1 s/cy2 in the time of conjunction with the Sun.

Religious use


The Islamic calendar has retained an observational definition of the New Moon, marking the new month when the first Crescent Moon is actually seen, and making it impossible to be certain in advance of when a specific month will begin . In Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is the largest country on the Arabian Peninsula [i]. ... 

, if the weather is cloudy when the New Moon is expected, observers are sent up in airplanes. In Iran Iran


Throughout history, Iran has been of great geostrategic [i] importance because of its centr ... 

 a special committee receives observations of every new moon to determine the beginning of each month. This committee uses one hundred groups of observers.

The New Moon is the beginning of the month in the Chinese calendar. Some Buddhist Chinese keep a vegetarian diet on the New Moon and Full Moon each month.

Literature

  1. M.Chapront-Touzé, J.Chapront: "ELP2000-85: a semianalytical lunar ephemeris adequate for historical times". Astron.Astrophys. 190, 342..352
  2. J.Chapront, M.Chapront-Touzé, G.Francou: "". Astronomy & Astrophysics 387 700–709

See also

  • Black moon Black Moon

    Black Moon is an album [i] by progressive rock [i] band Emerson, Lake & Palmer [i], released in 1992 ... 

  • Blue moon
  • Ecclesiastical new moon
  • Full moon Full moon

    [i] lies on the opposite side of [[Earth]... 

  • Half moon
  • Metonic cycle

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