Exercise:
At a point with latitude near
58°N,
the Last-Quarter Moon is seen rising in the north-east.
What time of day is it?
What
time of year is it?
If the Moon is at Last
Quarter,
it is lagging 18 hours behind the Sun -
alternatively,
it is 6 hours ahead of the Sun.
The Sun crosses the meridian at
noon,
so the Moon must be crossing the meridian at 6 am.
At this latitude, if it is
rising in the north-east,
it must be at its most northern
point,
so it will be rising about 9 hours before it crosses the
meridian.
So it must be rising about 9 pm.
The Moon is at its most
northern point:
the point the Sun only reaches at midsummer
(that
is RA = 6h; declination = +23.4°).
And if the Moon is at Last
Quarter,
it has travelled three-quarters of the way around the
sky from the Sun.
So it is 270° east of the Sun -
alternatively, it is 90° west of the Sun.
So the Moon is where the Sun
was 90 days ago.
So the Sun must presently be at
(summer
solstice + 90 days) = autumn equinox.
Back to "The Moon".