The intersection of the moon
The intersection of the moon is the intersection of the moon's orbit and the moon's orbit crosses the ecliptic. It is a place where the moon crosses the ecliptic north. The bridge is a place where the moon crosses the ecliptic to the south. The equation only occurs at the intersection. The eclipse takes place when the moon intersects the sun at the intersection and the eclipse. Lunar eclipses occur when the moon, the full moon, crosses the intersection. If a full moon appears within an intersection of 11 ° 38 ', a lunar eclipse may occur, and if there is a moon at an intersection within 17 ° 25', a solar eclipse may occur. The intersection of the Moon completes one revolution by reversing the ecliptic over 6793.5 days or 18.5996 years.