. Each phase would be rotated 180° if seen looking northward from the
Southern Hemisphere. The upper part of the diagram is not to scale, as the Moon, the Earth, and the Moon's orbit are all much smaller relative to the Earth's orbit than shown here. There are four
principal (primary, or major) lunar phases: the
new moon, first quarter,
full moon, and last quarter (also known as third or final quarter), when the Moon's
ecliptic longitude is at an angle to the Sun (as viewed from the center of the Earth) of 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270° respectively. Each of these phases appears at slightly different times at different locations on Earth, and tabulated times are therefore always
geocentric (calculated for the Earth's center). Between the principal phases are
intermediate phases, during which the apparent shape of the illuminated Moon is either
crescent or
gibbous. On average, the intermediate phases last one-quarter of a
synodic month, or 7.38 days. The term '''' is used for an intermediate phase when the Moon's apparent shape is thickening, from new to a full moon; and '''' when the shape is thinning. The duration from full moon to new moon (or new moon to full moon) varies from approximately to about . Due to lunar motion relative to the meridian and the
ecliptic, in Earth's
Northern Hemisphere: • A new moon appears highest at the summer
solstice and lowest at the winter solstice. • A first-quarter moon appears highest at the spring
equinox and lowest at the autumn equinox. • A full moon appears highest at the winter solstice and lowest at the summer solstice. • A last-quarter moon appears highest at the autumn equinox and lowest at the spring equinox. Non-Western cultures may use a different number of lunar phases; for example, traditional
Hawaiian culture has a total of 30 phases (one per day).
Waxing and waning When the Sun and Moon are
aligned on the same side of the Earth (conjunct), the Moon is "new", and the side of the Moon facing Earth is not illuminated by the Sun. As the Moon
waxes (the amount of illuminated surface as seen from Earth increases), the lunar phases progress through the new moon, crescent moon, first-quarter moon,
gibbous moon, and full moon phases. The Moon then
wanes as it passes through the gibbous moon, third-quarter moon, and crescent moon phases, before returning back to new moon. The terms
old moon and
new moon are not interchangeable. The "old moon" is a waning sliver (which eventually becomes undetectable to the naked eye) until the moment it aligns with the Sun and begins to wax, at which point it becomes new again.
Half moon is often used to mean the first- and third-quarter moons, while the term
quarter refers to the extent of the Moon's cycle around the Earth, not its shape. When an illuminated hemisphere is viewed from a certain angle, the portion of the illuminated area that is visible will have a two-dimensional shape as defined by the intersection of an
ellipse and circle (in which the ellipse's
major axis coincides with the circle's diameter). If the half-ellipse is convex with respect to the half-circle, then the shape will be gibbous (bulging outwards), whereas if the half-ellipse is concave with respect to the half-circle, then the shape will be a
crescent. When a crescent moon occurs, the phenomenon of
earthshine may be apparent, where the night side of the Moon dimly reflects indirect sunlight reflected from Earth.
Principal and intermediate phases of the Moon == Timekeeping ==