How to spot the 'Da Vinci glow,' a rare lunar phenomenon visible this week

Earthshine
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Look up at the moon on a clear night this week and you might see something strange: the entire moon glowing faintly even though it's a thin crescent. The dark portion isn't actually dark. it's glowing with a ghostly light that makes the full circle of the moon visible against the night sky.

This is Earthshine, one of the few times when the new moon becomes the main event instead of the full moon. We spend so much time chasing full moons that we completely overlook this: the quiet, strange version that only shows up a few days a year.

While Earthshine happens throughout the year, spring offers the only window where it’s bright enough to easily spot with the naked eye, and this week is your best chance.

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It’s a phenomenon so historic that Leonardo da Vinci first explained its mystery in the 16th century, which is why it's often called the "Da Vinci glow. Here is what you're looking at, and how to catch this rare sight before it disappears.

What Earthshine actually is

Full moons are bright because sunlight hits the moon's surface directly and reflects straight back to Earth. One reflection, bright result.

Earthshine requires three reflections. Sunlight hits Earth first, bounces off our planet's surface toward the moon, reflects off the moon's surface, then travels back to Earth where you see it. Each reflection reduces brightness dramatically, which is why Earthshine looks so dim compared to a full moon.

The effect only works during crescent moon phases, the few days before and after a new moon when only a sliver is directly lit by sunlight. The rest of the moon's face catches Earth's reflected light, making the dark portion glow faintly.

You're essentially seeing Earth's light illuminating the moon the same way moonlight illuminates Earth on clear nights. The roles are reversed.

How to see Earthshine

Look within 45 minutes of sunrise or sunset during May 19–21, with early morning just before sunrise being ideal. The sky is dark enough to see the dim glow clearly and atmospheric conditions tend to be better than evening.

If you miss this window, two more opportunities appear in June: June 11–13 and June 17–19.

You don't need telescopes, binoculars, or special equipment. Find the crescent moon during those windows and look at the dark portion next to the bright sliver. Instead of appearing completely black, you should see it glowing faintly.

Dark sky locations away from city lights help, but Earthshine is visible from suburbs and even some urban areas if light pollution isn't too severe. Give your eyes 5–10 minutes to adjust after going outside, and avoid looking at your phone during that period.

If you're struggling to see it, try looking slightly away from the moon as your peripheral vision is more sensitive to dim light than your central vision.

Why spring is the only time you can easily spot it

While Earthshine happens year-round, it's at its brightest during Northern Hemisphere spring, April through June, because of Earth's albedo.

Albedo measures how much light a surface reflects, and during spring, lingering snow and ice create ideal high-reflectivity conditions. The Northern Hemisphere also tilts more toward the sun at this time, exposing more of that reflective surface to direct sunlight and amplifying how much light bounces toward the moon.

By summer, snowmelt and vegetation reduce Earth's albedo, and Earthshine becomes too dim to spot with the naked eye. It won't be this vivid again until next spring.


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Kaycee Hill
How-to Editor

Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.

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