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2 answers

http://www.almanac.com/astronomy/moondays.php

2007-01-26 00:28:46 · answer #1 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

It would help if we knew your time zone, because that affects the answer. Here is a list based on UT (Universal Time, or Greenwich time).

2007 Moon Phases
New ................ Full
......................... 03 Jan 13:57
19 Jan 04:01 ... 02 Feb 05:45
17 Feb 16:14 ... 03 Mar 23:17
19 Mar 02:42 ... 02 Apr 17:15
17 Apr 11:36 ... 02 May 10:09
16 May 19:27 ... 01 Jun 01:03
15 Jun 03:13 ... 30 Jun 13:48
14 Jul 12:04 ... 30 Jul 00:48
12 Aug 23:02 ... 28 Aug 10:35
11 Sep 12:44 ... 26 Sep 19:45
11 Oct 05:01 ... 26 Oct 04:51
09 Nov 23:03 ... 24 Nov 14:30
09 Dec 17:40 ... 24 Dec 01:15

You will need to convert these to your local time zone, which will change the date in some cases. For example, the full moon at the end of June occurs at 00:48 on the 30th, UT. If you live in New York, you are 5 hours behind UT in the winter and 4 hours behind UT in the summer. So, subtracting 4 hours would move the date of the full moon back to June 29th at 20:48, New York time.

2007-01-26 10:58:57 · answer #2 · answered by Keith P 7 · 0 0

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