What is the Terra phase?

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The moon has a night and day like Earth. When sitting on the Moon and viewing the Earth what does it look like when the Earth goes through phases like the Lunar Phase?



Part of my question was a duplicate so I deleted it and posted the other link below.
How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?










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    Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
    – StephenG
    5 hours ago














up vote
1
down vote

favorite












The moon has a night and day like Earth. When sitting on the Moon and viewing the Earth what does it look like when the Earth goes through phases like the Lunar Phase?



Part of my question was a duplicate so I deleted it and posted the other link below.
How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
    – StephenG
    5 hours ago












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











The moon has a night and day like Earth. When sitting on the Moon and viewing the Earth what does it look like when the Earth goes through phases like the Lunar Phase?



Part of my question was a duplicate so I deleted it and posted the other link below.
How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?










share|improve this question















The moon has a night and day like Earth. When sitting on the Moon and viewing the Earth what does it look like when the Earth goes through phases like the Lunar Phase?



Part of my question was a duplicate so I deleted it and posted the other link below.
How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?







orbit the-moon earth moon-phases visualization






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edited 32 secs ago

























asked 6 hours ago









Muze

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  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
    – StephenG
    5 hours ago












  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
    – StephenG
    5 hours ago







1




1




Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
– StephenG
5 hours ago




Possible duplicate of How bright is the full Earth during the lunar midnight?
– StephenG
5 hours ago










1 Answer
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The Earth-Moon System is unique in that the moon is tidally locked to the planet, but the planet is not tidally locked to the moon. Earth has a 24 hour day, whereas the Moon has a 29.5 Earth day long day. It takes the Moon 29.5 Earth days to orbit around the Earth once as well, which means the Moon is tidally locked in a 1:1 ratio. This means that if you were to stand on a particular point on the Moon, the Earth would not appear to move because the Moon is spinning on its axis at a rate such that it matches how much the Earth should appear to move from orbiting around it. Basically, the same side of the moon is always facing the Earth, which is why there is a concept of a "dark" side of the moon. The "dark" side is not always actually dark, it's just that no one had ever seen it before until we sent some satellites up there to look at it.



Here is a gif showing tidal locking. The tidal locked moon is on the left.



enter image description here



Now imagine you are back on Earth. Throughout the course of the day you can see the Moon move across the sky. That's because 24 hours is drastically shorter than 29.5 days. However, if you were standing on the Moon, the Earth would appear to stand still. Now, it would actually appear to wobble a bit because of the Moon's orbit's eccentricity, but it more or less stays in the same place.



Here is an artistic yet scientifically accurate rendition of what it would look like. It's from Space Engine. Notice how the gas giant (the planet) wobbles a bit but stays in roughly the same place. It would look similar if you were on the Moon, but without the atmosphere, and the Earth would obviously be smaller and further away.



enter image description here



Yes, the Earth would go through the same phases as the Moon. It would complete a cycle every 29.5 days because that is how long it takes for the Moon to orbit around the Earth. However, something different is that you would be able to see the Earth rotate, since it takes only 24 hours to rotate. When we look up at the Moon from Earth, as I said before, we cannot see it rotate because it is tidally locked, and thus only one side gets shown.



Brightness depends on the phase, but generally the Earth is brighter from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth because the Earth has a higher albedo (reflects more light) than the Moon, and the Earth appears larger from the Moon than the Moon appears from the Earth. The Moon takes up roughly 30 arcminutes of the sky, whereas the Earth takes up roughly 1 degree and 50 arcminutes.



At full moon, the Moon has an apparent magnitude of roughly -12.75. At full earth, the Earth has an apparent magnitude of -16.75. That's about 40x brighter! If we were to qualify phases as a % from 0% being a new moon to 100% being a full moon, then every 10% you go below 100%, the apparent magnitude of each phase decreases by about the same amount. For example: 90% Earth would be roughly -16.5 (+.25 magnitude), and 90% Moon would be roughly 15.5 (also +.25 magnitude). The differences in magnitude only get larger when you go below 10% phase, where each little bit of the celestial body that shows adds a lot more to the magnitude.



Here is a rough chart:



enter image description here



If you have more questions feel free to ask.






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PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
    – Muze
    1 hour ago










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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
6
down vote



accepted










The Earth-Moon System is unique in that the moon is tidally locked to the planet, but the planet is not tidally locked to the moon. Earth has a 24 hour day, whereas the Moon has a 29.5 Earth day long day. It takes the Moon 29.5 Earth days to orbit around the Earth once as well, which means the Moon is tidally locked in a 1:1 ratio. This means that if you were to stand on a particular point on the Moon, the Earth would not appear to move because the Moon is spinning on its axis at a rate such that it matches how much the Earth should appear to move from orbiting around it. Basically, the same side of the moon is always facing the Earth, which is why there is a concept of a "dark" side of the moon. The "dark" side is not always actually dark, it's just that no one had ever seen it before until we sent some satellites up there to look at it.



Here is a gif showing tidal locking. The tidal locked moon is on the left.



enter image description here



Now imagine you are back on Earth. Throughout the course of the day you can see the Moon move across the sky. That's because 24 hours is drastically shorter than 29.5 days. However, if you were standing on the Moon, the Earth would appear to stand still. Now, it would actually appear to wobble a bit because of the Moon's orbit's eccentricity, but it more or less stays in the same place.



Here is an artistic yet scientifically accurate rendition of what it would look like. It's from Space Engine. Notice how the gas giant (the planet) wobbles a bit but stays in roughly the same place. It would look similar if you were on the Moon, but without the atmosphere, and the Earth would obviously be smaller and further away.



enter image description here



Yes, the Earth would go through the same phases as the Moon. It would complete a cycle every 29.5 days because that is how long it takes for the Moon to orbit around the Earth. However, something different is that you would be able to see the Earth rotate, since it takes only 24 hours to rotate. When we look up at the Moon from Earth, as I said before, we cannot see it rotate because it is tidally locked, and thus only one side gets shown.



Brightness depends on the phase, but generally the Earth is brighter from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth because the Earth has a higher albedo (reflects more light) than the Moon, and the Earth appears larger from the Moon than the Moon appears from the Earth. The Moon takes up roughly 30 arcminutes of the sky, whereas the Earth takes up roughly 1 degree and 50 arcminutes.



At full moon, the Moon has an apparent magnitude of roughly -12.75. At full earth, the Earth has an apparent magnitude of -16.75. That's about 40x brighter! If we were to qualify phases as a % from 0% being a new moon to 100% being a full moon, then every 10% you go below 100%, the apparent magnitude of each phase decreases by about the same amount. For example: 90% Earth would be roughly -16.5 (+.25 magnitude), and 90% Moon would be roughly 15.5 (also +.25 magnitude). The differences in magnitude only get larger when you go below 10% phase, where each little bit of the celestial body that shows adds a lot more to the magnitude.



Here is a rough chart:



enter image description here



If you have more questions feel free to ask.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • 3




    Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
    – Muze
    1 hour ago














up vote
6
down vote



accepted










The Earth-Moon System is unique in that the moon is tidally locked to the planet, but the planet is not tidally locked to the moon. Earth has a 24 hour day, whereas the Moon has a 29.5 Earth day long day. It takes the Moon 29.5 Earth days to orbit around the Earth once as well, which means the Moon is tidally locked in a 1:1 ratio. This means that if you were to stand on a particular point on the Moon, the Earth would not appear to move because the Moon is spinning on its axis at a rate such that it matches how much the Earth should appear to move from orbiting around it. Basically, the same side of the moon is always facing the Earth, which is why there is a concept of a "dark" side of the moon. The "dark" side is not always actually dark, it's just that no one had ever seen it before until we sent some satellites up there to look at it.



Here is a gif showing tidal locking. The tidal locked moon is on the left.



enter image description here



Now imagine you are back on Earth. Throughout the course of the day you can see the Moon move across the sky. That's because 24 hours is drastically shorter than 29.5 days. However, if you were standing on the Moon, the Earth would appear to stand still. Now, it would actually appear to wobble a bit because of the Moon's orbit's eccentricity, but it more or less stays in the same place.



Here is an artistic yet scientifically accurate rendition of what it would look like. It's from Space Engine. Notice how the gas giant (the planet) wobbles a bit but stays in roughly the same place. It would look similar if you were on the Moon, but without the atmosphere, and the Earth would obviously be smaller and further away.



enter image description here



Yes, the Earth would go through the same phases as the Moon. It would complete a cycle every 29.5 days because that is how long it takes for the Moon to orbit around the Earth. However, something different is that you would be able to see the Earth rotate, since it takes only 24 hours to rotate. When we look up at the Moon from Earth, as I said before, we cannot see it rotate because it is tidally locked, and thus only one side gets shown.



Brightness depends on the phase, but generally the Earth is brighter from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth because the Earth has a higher albedo (reflects more light) than the Moon, and the Earth appears larger from the Moon than the Moon appears from the Earth. The Moon takes up roughly 30 arcminutes of the sky, whereas the Earth takes up roughly 1 degree and 50 arcminutes.



At full moon, the Moon has an apparent magnitude of roughly -12.75. At full earth, the Earth has an apparent magnitude of -16.75. That's about 40x brighter! If we were to qualify phases as a % from 0% being a new moon to 100% being a full moon, then every 10% you go below 100%, the apparent magnitude of each phase decreases by about the same amount. For example: 90% Earth would be roughly -16.5 (+.25 magnitude), and 90% Moon would be roughly 15.5 (also +.25 magnitude). The differences in magnitude only get larger when you go below 10% phase, where each little bit of the celestial body that shows adds a lot more to the magnitude.



Here is a rough chart:



enter image description here



If you have more questions feel free to ask.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • 3




    Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
    – Muze
    1 hour ago












up vote
6
down vote



accepted







up vote
6
down vote



accepted






The Earth-Moon System is unique in that the moon is tidally locked to the planet, but the planet is not tidally locked to the moon. Earth has a 24 hour day, whereas the Moon has a 29.5 Earth day long day. It takes the Moon 29.5 Earth days to orbit around the Earth once as well, which means the Moon is tidally locked in a 1:1 ratio. This means that if you were to stand on a particular point on the Moon, the Earth would not appear to move because the Moon is spinning on its axis at a rate such that it matches how much the Earth should appear to move from orbiting around it. Basically, the same side of the moon is always facing the Earth, which is why there is a concept of a "dark" side of the moon. The "dark" side is not always actually dark, it's just that no one had ever seen it before until we sent some satellites up there to look at it.



Here is a gif showing tidal locking. The tidal locked moon is on the left.



enter image description here



Now imagine you are back on Earth. Throughout the course of the day you can see the Moon move across the sky. That's because 24 hours is drastically shorter than 29.5 days. However, if you were standing on the Moon, the Earth would appear to stand still. Now, it would actually appear to wobble a bit because of the Moon's orbit's eccentricity, but it more or less stays in the same place.



Here is an artistic yet scientifically accurate rendition of what it would look like. It's from Space Engine. Notice how the gas giant (the planet) wobbles a bit but stays in roughly the same place. It would look similar if you were on the Moon, but without the atmosphere, and the Earth would obviously be smaller and further away.



enter image description here



Yes, the Earth would go through the same phases as the Moon. It would complete a cycle every 29.5 days because that is how long it takes for the Moon to orbit around the Earth. However, something different is that you would be able to see the Earth rotate, since it takes only 24 hours to rotate. When we look up at the Moon from Earth, as I said before, we cannot see it rotate because it is tidally locked, and thus only one side gets shown.



Brightness depends on the phase, but generally the Earth is brighter from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth because the Earth has a higher albedo (reflects more light) than the Moon, and the Earth appears larger from the Moon than the Moon appears from the Earth. The Moon takes up roughly 30 arcminutes of the sky, whereas the Earth takes up roughly 1 degree and 50 arcminutes.



At full moon, the Moon has an apparent magnitude of roughly -12.75. At full earth, the Earth has an apparent magnitude of -16.75. That's about 40x brighter! If we were to qualify phases as a % from 0% being a new moon to 100% being a full moon, then every 10% you go below 100%, the apparent magnitude of each phase decreases by about the same amount. For example: 90% Earth would be roughly -16.5 (+.25 magnitude), and 90% Moon would be roughly 15.5 (also +.25 magnitude). The differences in magnitude only get larger when you go below 10% phase, where each little bit of the celestial body that shows adds a lot more to the magnitude.



Here is a rough chart:



enter image description here



If you have more questions feel free to ask.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









The Earth-Moon System is unique in that the moon is tidally locked to the planet, but the planet is not tidally locked to the moon. Earth has a 24 hour day, whereas the Moon has a 29.5 Earth day long day. It takes the Moon 29.5 Earth days to orbit around the Earth once as well, which means the Moon is tidally locked in a 1:1 ratio. This means that if you were to stand on a particular point on the Moon, the Earth would not appear to move because the Moon is spinning on its axis at a rate such that it matches how much the Earth should appear to move from orbiting around it. Basically, the same side of the moon is always facing the Earth, which is why there is a concept of a "dark" side of the moon. The "dark" side is not always actually dark, it's just that no one had ever seen it before until we sent some satellites up there to look at it.



Here is a gif showing tidal locking. The tidal locked moon is on the left.



enter image description here



Now imagine you are back on Earth. Throughout the course of the day you can see the Moon move across the sky. That's because 24 hours is drastically shorter than 29.5 days. However, if you were standing on the Moon, the Earth would appear to stand still. Now, it would actually appear to wobble a bit because of the Moon's orbit's eccentricity, but it more or less stays in the same place.



Here is an artistic yet scientifically accurate rendition of what it would look like. It's from Space Engine. Notice how the gas giant (the planet) wobbles a bit but stays in roughly the same place. It would look similar if you were on the Moon, but without the atmosphere, and the Earth would obviously be smaller and further away.



enter image description here



Yes, the Earth would go through the same phases as the Moon. It would complete a cycle every 29.5 days because that is how long it takes for the Moon to orbit around the Earth. However, something different is that you would be able to see the Earth rotate, since it takes only 24 hours to rotate. When we look up at the Moon from Earth, as I said before, we cannot see it rotate because it is tidally locked, and thus only one side gets shown.



Brightness depends on the phase, but generally the Earth is brighter from the Moon than the Moon is from the Earth because the Earth has a higher albedo (reflects more light) than the Moon, and the Earth appears larger from the Moon than the Moon appears from the Earth. The Moon takes up roughly 30 arcminutes of the sky, whereas the Earth takes up roughly 1 degree and 50 arcminutes.



At full moon, the Moon has an apparent magnitude of roughly -12.75. At full earth, the Earth has an apparent magnitude of -16.75. That's about 40x brighter! If we were to qualify phases as a % from 0% being a new moon to 100% being a full moon, then every 10% you go below 100%, the apparent magnitude of each phase decreases by about the same amount. For example: 90% Earth would be roughly -16.5 (+.25 magnitude), and 90% Moon would be roughly 15.5 (also +.25 magnitude). The differences in magnitude only get larger when you go below 10% phase, where each little bit of the celestial body that shows adds a lot more to the magnitude.



Here is a rough chart:



enter image description here



If you have more questions feel free to ask.







share|improve this answer










New contributor




PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 hours ago





















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answered 5 hours ago









PUSSYDESTROYER-9000

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PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






PUSSYDESTROYER-9000 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 3




    Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
    – Muze
    1 hour ago












  • 3




    Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
    – Muze
    1 hour ago







3




3




Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
– Muze
1 hour ago




Very good answer, but that name will get you down votes,
– Muze
1 hour ago

















 

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