How Does Sunlight Reach the Moon During a Full Moon?

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During a full moon, the Earth is positioned between the sun and the moon, allowing sunlight to reach the moon despite the Earth's presence. The moon's orbit is slightly inclined relative to the Earth's orbit, which is why eclipses do not occur every full moon or new moon. Light travels in straight lines, but the alignment of the sun, Earth, and moon must be precise for an eclipse to happen. Lunar eclipses can occur more frequently than solar eclipses because they are visible from half of the Earth's surface, while solar eclipses are limited to narrow bands. Understanding the mechanics of these celestial events clarifies why eclipses are not as common as one might assume.
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When Earth is between sun and moon,we have full moon.
But I can not really understand that. How light of sun reach at moon? Does not hit in earth?
Or maybe light follow a curve as general theory says?

Thank you!
 
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You realize that the sun is many times larger than the earth, don't you?
 
I realize that,but moon is close to earth. If light follow a straight line,I do not think that is possible this fenomeno.
 
Hepic said:
I realize that,but moon is close to earth. If light follow a straight line,I do not think that is possible this fenomeno.

So I take it you think the moon is in the plane of the ecliptic. That's your problem.
 
Hepic said:
When Earth is between sun and moon,we have full moon.
But I can not really understand that. How light of sun reach at moon? Does not hit in earth?
Or maybe light follow a curve as general theory says?
I think you better search for "eclipse", and learn about why they don't happen at every new and full Moon.
 
No, neither of those is a good description of the problem. The problem is simply a lack of precision of the alignment.
 
russ_watters said:
No, neither of those is a good description of the problem. The problem is simply a lack of precision of the alignment.
To extend this answer: The distance earth-moon is ~60 times the radius of earth. At this distance, the area where no sun is visible is a circle with a radius of 4500km (smaller than Earth as the sun is larger than earth). The moon usually passes "above" or "below" that circle as the orbits of Earth (around sun) and moon (around earth) are not in the same plane. Two times per year (=two times per orbit of earth), it switches between those options, and this can give an eclipse.

Hepic said:
Or maybe light follow a curve as general theory says?
While the theory of general relativity (not "general theory") gives a tiny deflection of the sunlight, this is completely negligible here.
Something you can see is the scattering and deflection of sunlight in the atmosphere of Earth - it makes the moon dark red during an eclipse.
 
Of course, it does sometimes happen that the moon is directly "behind" the earth. That's when we get a "lunar eclipse". Even at those times the moon does not become completely dark (more of a dark red) because of sunlight bent by the Earth's atmosphere that reflects off the moon.
 
Hepic said:
I realize that,but moon is close to earth. If light follow a straight line,I do not think that is possible this fenomeno.

The word you are looking for is 'phenomenon'.

Yes, light rays do travel in straight lines, discounting the effects of gravitational lensing. However, all of the rays emitted by the sun do not originate from the same point. Making a sketch would go a long way to showing this point.
 
  • #10
A few more notes of expansion, as I was typing from a phone at the time:

1. The moon's orbit is only about 5 degrees inclined to the ecliptic.
2. The moon crosses the ecliptic twice a month, but the sun is only at one of those spots twice a year - and their times being at that spot may not be at the same time.
3. Because the inclination isn't large compared to the Earth's apparent diameter (2 degrees) to the moon, you can have several at least partial eclipses a year; not just one or two. Extra ones are a month apart.
4. #3 is also why you have many more lunar eclipses than solar eclipses (the sun's and moon's apparent diameters to Earth are only 0.5 degrees).
 
  • #11
SteamKing said:
The word you are looking for is 'phenomenon'.

Yes, light rays do travel in straight lines, discounting the effects of gravitational lensing. However, all of the rays emitted by the sun do not originate from the same point. Making a sketch would go a long way to showing this point.

going from your 2 responses it would appear you also don't understand how eclipses happen :wink:

the larger size of the sun in this case isn't the important thing, as from the distance of the Earth and moon is from the sun, the sun subtends the same angular size as the moon
it has nothing to do with rays of the sun shining around the earth, gravitational lensing etc

it has ALL to do with what others have posted before this last post of yours :smile:

regards
Dave
 
  • #12
I didn't say that gravitational lensing was responsible for the moon being able to shine when the Earth is between it and the sun. The OP did not discuss eclipses at all, which have no bearing on how sunlight is able to strike the moon when it is on the far side of the earth.

When the moon is between the Earth and the sun, the moon is able to block some of the sun's light from striking the surface of the earth, but the width of the moon's shadow on the surface of the Earth during a total eclipse is only a few miles wide. There is plenty of sunlight which illuminates the Earth on either side of the eclipse, outside the band of total or partial darkness.
 
  • #13
Is it true that Solar and lunar eclipses occur every full moon and new moon?(For some place on Earth)
(Source:Stellarium)
 
  • #14
Is this possible?
 

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  • #15
adjacent said:
Is it true that Solar and lunar eclipses occur every full moon and new moon?(For some place on Earth)
(Source:Stellarium)

It's hard to evaluate exactly what your source is saying, since you provide no direct link to these statements.

However, solar eclipses are remarkable because they occur somewhat rarely.

This article describes their frequency of occurrence:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_eclipse

According to this article, 2-5 solar eclipses occur each year. The last year to have 5 solar eclipses was 1935; the next year with 5 eclipses won't be until 2206.

A lunar eclipse can occur only on a night with a full moon, but it does not necessarily follow that every night with a full moon produces a lunar eclipse. Every year produces at least two lunar eclipses.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_eclipse
 
  • #16
SteamKing said:
It's hard to evaluate exactly what your source is saying, since you provide no direct link to these statements.
Ah,(http://www.stellarium.org/) Its a sky simulating software
(I don't have it right now.This laptop is slow.I will recheck once I get to my other home(Next year)
SteamKing said:
According to this article, 2-5 solar eclipses occur each year. The last year to have 5 solar eclipses was 1935; the next year with 5 eclipses won't be until 2206.
Since the moon always come between the Earth and the sun during new moon,Why not?
At least the shadow should get to somewhere on the Earth.
 
  • #17
adjacent said:
Ah,(http://www.stellarium.org/) ....
Since the moon always come between the Earth and the sun during new moon,Why not?
At least the shadow should get to somewhere on the Earth.

not unless there is an alignment and there isn't one every new moon

reread the earlier posts by mfb and russ_watter and tfr000
and do a google on eclipses and what is needed to produce one, even a partial one

Dave
 
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  • #18
davenn said:
not unless there is an alignment and there isn't one every new moon

reread the earlier posts by mfb and russ_watter and tfr000
and do a google on eclipses and what is needed to produce one, even a partial one

Dave

Oh.I see.
Thank you
 
  • #19
Bob said:
Is this possible?

I am wonder that too.
Can answer Bob's question?
 
  • #20
Hepic said:
I am wonder that too.
Can answer Bob's question?

his drawing is out of proportion

your question has been answered :)

have your google searched eclipses yet ?

Dave
 
  • #21
adjacent said:
Since the moon always come between the Earth and the sun during new moon,Why not? At least the shadow should get to somewhere on the Earth.
The Moon does not always come between the Earth and Sun at new moon. The Moon's orbit is not in the same plane as the Earth's orbit around the Sun. It is close, but there is enough of an angle between them to cause "misses". You need to do some web searching for "eclipse" - there are websites that explain it much better than we can here.
 
  • #22
russ_watters said:
3. Because the inclination isn't large compared to the Earth's apparent diameter (2 degrees) to the moon, you can have several at least partial eclipses a year; not just one or two. Extra ones are a month apart.
4. #3 is also why you have many more lunar eclipses than solar eclipses (the sun's and moon's apparent diameters to Earth are only 0.5 degrees).
#4 depends on the interpretation. While the shadow of Earth is larger, the Earth is also a larger target to catch the smaller shadow of moon. The required alignment is the same in both cases, both for partial and full eclipses (at least if we neglect annular eclipses).
For a given location on earth, lunar eclipses are much more frequent as they are visible from half the surface on earth, while solar eclipses are visible within a very narrow band only, but the frequency of "one of those happens somewhere" is the same.

In the next 10 years, there will be 20 lunar eclipses 8 of them total) and 20 solar eclipses (6 of them total).
I'm not sure if two lunar eclipses with a distance of 1 month are possible, but a lunar eclipse and a solar eclipse 2 weeks afterwards (or vice versa) is common.

Bob said:
Is this possible?
No.
 
  • #23
I'm having a doubt, but let's check:
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse.html

They go by decade, so let's look at 2011-2010:

Solar Eclipses: 24
Total: 6

Lunar Eclipses: 23
Total: 9

And solar eclipses can indeed happen a month apart just like lunar eclipses, such as in June and July of 2011. So yeah, with a solar eclipse it is a smaller shadow but bigger target, so those effects must cancel out. You are indeed correct that I fooled myself by thinking about the visibility issue (and therefore publicity issue) with solar eclipses only being visible at certain places while lunar eclipses are visible everywhere.
 
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