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Posted

Why not? I am living in Penang, though it is close to the equator, it is still considered as the northern part/hemisphere. You see the moon virtually anywhere around the globe, except places around the poles, where it happens occasionally1. The Moon definitely enters the North part of the sky. You can check you astronomy encyclopedia or any star charts.

 

Extra1: http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/question.php?number=777

 

You can check the transit/rise and set time for the Moon from:

 

http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services

Posted

That is not what I thought I knew

 

What I have been told is this:

The Moon follows the same path as the Sun, meaning that it raises at East and downs at West, circulating between East & West through the South part of the sky, in the northern hemisphere.

 

is that correct?

 

I cannot find that simple information on the web... :(

Posted

Sounds good - our Moon being near to the ecliptic plane. And this holds for the southern hemisphere if you formulate it "facing the nearest pole" instead of the North.

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