Moon is passing about ∠16° of ♌ Leo tropical zodiac sector.
It is Snow Moon
The Full Moon these days is the Snow of February 2006.
Spring tide
There is high Full Moon ocean tide on this date. Combined Sun and Moon gravitational tidal force working on Earth is strong, because of the Sun-Earth-Moon syzygy alignment.
Apparent angular diameter ∠1772"
Lunar disc appears visually 9.2% narrower than solar disc. Moon and Sun apparent angular diameters are ∠1772" and ∠1944".
Lunation 75 / 1028
The Moon is 14 days old and navigating through the middle part of the current synodic month. This is lunation 75 of Meeus index or 1028 from Brown series.
The length of this lunation is 29 days, 10 hours and 16 minutes and it is 32 minutes longer than the upcoming lunation's length. The lengths of the following synodic months are going to increase with the lunar orbit true anomaly getting closer to the value it has at the point of New Moon at apogee (∠180°).
Lunation length shorter than mean
The length of the current synodic month is 2 hours and 28 minutes shorter than the mean synodic month length. It is 3 hours and 41 minutes longer compared to 21st century's shortest synodic month length.
Lunar orbit details for
True anomaly ∠347.5°
The true anomaly of the Moon orbit at the beginning of this lunation cycle is ∠347.5° and at the beginning of the next lunar synodic month the true anomaly is going to be ∠2.9°.
Moon before apogee
13 days since point of perigee on 30 January 2006 at 07:47 in ♒ Aquarius the lunar orbit is getting widen while the Moon is moving away from the Earth. It will keep this direction over the next day until the Moon reaches the point of next apogee on 14 February 2006 at 00:48 in ♍ Virgo.
The Moon is 404 569 km(251 388 mi) away from Earth and getting further over the next day until the point apogee when Earth-Moon distance is going to be 406 362 km(252 502 mi).
Moon before descending node
10 days after ascending node on 2 February 2006 at 08:02 in ♈ Aries the Moon is positioned north of the ecliptic over the following 4 days until the lunar crosses the ecliptic again from North to South in descending node on 16 February 2006 at 14:38 in ♍ Virgo.
3 days since the last northern standstill on 8 February 2006 at 18:18 in ♊ Gemini when the Moon has reached North declination of ∠28.555° the lunar orbit is extending southward over the next 10 days to face maximum declination of ∠-28.648° at the point of next southern standstill on 23 February 2006 at 09:37 in ♑ Capricorn.