The moon reaches its first quarter phase on Sunday, May 12, 2019, at 1:12 UTC. Although the first quarter moon comes at the same instant worldwide, the clock reads differently by time zone. At North American and U.S. times zones, the first quarter moon actually happens on Saturday, May 11, at 22:12 (10:12 p.m.) Atlantic Daylight Time, 21:12 (9:12 p.m.) Eastern Daylight Time, 20:12 (8:12 p.m.) Central Daylight Time, 19:12 (7:12 p.m.) Mountain Daylight Time, 18:12 (6:12 p.m.) Pacific Daylight Time, 17:12 (5:12 p.m.) Alaskan Daylight Time and 15:12 (3:12 p.m.) Hawaiian Standard Time.
A first quarter moon rises around noon and sets around midnight. You’ll likely spot it in late afternoon or early evening, high up in the sky. At this moon phase, the moon is showing us precisely half of its lighted half. Or you might say that – at first quarter moon – we’re seeing half the moon’s day side.
We call this moon a quarter and not a half because it is one quarter of the way around in its orbit of Earth, as measured from one new moon to the next. Also, although a first quarter moon appears half-lit to us, the illuminated portion we see of a first quarter moon truly is just a quarter. We’re now seeing half the moon’s day side, that is. Another lighted quarter of the moon shines just as brightly in the direction opposite Earth!
And what about the term half moon? That’s a beloved term, but not an official one.
Read more: 4 keys to understanding moon phases
Bottom line: The first quarter moon comes on May 12 at 1:12 UTC; translate UTC to your time. As viewed from the whole Earth, it’s high up at sunset on May 11, looking like half a pie.
Check out EarthSky’s guide to the bright planets.
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Source:
https://earthsky.org/moon-phases/first-quarter