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15 answers

Don't confuse 'dark' with 'far'.... Both sides of the moon (near and far) are alternately lighted by the sun or in it's shadow once per lunar month.

It IS possible to see the near side of the moon during a new moon phase when an effect known as albedo is occurring. This is when sunlight reflects from the earth and illuminates the otherwise dark part of the moon. I have seen this happen myself and it is quite spectacular.

2006-10-05 09:51:07 · answer #1 · answered by Steve 7 · 0 0

When moon is mostly dark, it is approximately between sun and earth (because when it's exactly between we get a solar eclipse), so light from the sun hits the earth and part of it is reflected back, lighting the moon a little bit. We can see this effect only in the evenings and early mornings, because during the day the sky (air) is too bright too allow us to see it (we can barely see the bright side of the moon), and during the night no no direct sunlight reaches the earth.

2006-10-05 22:38:03 · answer #2 · answered by todaywiserthanyesterday 4 · 0 0

The dark side of the moon always faces away from the Earth because the moon spins on its axis at the identical rate that it revolves around the Earth. When we see a new moon, the other "dark" side is full.

So look at the moon from the other side by going into space.

2006-10-05 09:42:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Only if we fly out there and have a look at it; it appears as the darkside to use on earth - because when we ever see it in sunlight we only see one side (due to its orbit around us). humans have seen the dark side of the moon, on numerous Apollo Missions.

If we wanted to see the dark side of the moon without the discomfort and effort of going into space I'd recomend a large mirror, to shine what it looks like back to us, but thats very unlikley to happen

hope this helps

2006-10-05 11:01:45 · answer #4 · answered by prof. Jack 3 · 0 0

before each little thing, if you're below the effect that the aspect of the moon we not in any respect see is continually darkish, it really is totally incorrect. The moon is a sphere, a ball, a globe. The sunlight can only shine on one 0.5, of direction. yet over the technique a lunar month (about 29 days) each little thing of the moon receives sunlight. if you're asking no matter if the unlit portion of the moon is seen, certain, often times, highly before each little thing crescent, only after new moon. you want to be in a gloomy position to work out it. contemplated effortless from the brilliant sunlit halo of the of Earth's ecosystem, is seen as a faint, greenish glow on the darkish portion of the crescent moon.

2016-11-26 19:30:49 · answer #5 · answered by meske 4 · 0 0

I assume you're talking about the fact that while there is a crecent moon we can still see the part of the moon which is not illuminated by the Sun.
The effect is typically called Earthshine, It is caused by the Earth reflecting the sun's light back onto the moon, which we later see as an "ashen glow".

2006-10-05 09:48:39 · answer #6 · answered by April C 3 · 0 0

Do you mean what we used to refer to as" the old moon in the new moons arms", when light reflected from the earth lights up the old moon?

2006-10-05 09:54:26 · answer #7 · answered by bo nidle 4 · 0 0

its always there but its called the dark side because its dark and mixes in with the night sky, whether its a waning or waxing crescent the rest is still there you may even see it if you look closely

2006-10-05 09:37:36 · answer #8 · answered by hellraiza15 3 · 0 0

Cutting space travel out of the equation, I'd have to say libration, the apparent oscillation (swaying) of the moon.

2006-10-05 09:38:53 · answer #9 · answered by Mag999nus 3 · 0 0

We cannot see the dark side of the moon...
It is always facing away from the earth...
It is not really always dark, we just cannot see it because
it is always turned away from us...

2006-10-05 09:44:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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