Respuesta :

the light would shift from the left side to the right side of the moon

In the southern hemisphere, the light of the Moon grows from left to right in the waxing stage while the coverage of the dark area increases from left to right.

When there is a full moon, how does the moon obtain its light?

As the Moon's orbit is slanted by about 5 degrees, the Full Moon travels either above or below the Earth's shadow most of the time, allowing it to be completely lit every month.

A Lunar Eclipse occurs only when the Moon's orbit *intersects* the Earth's shadow. If the Sun/Earth/Moon system were exactly flat, we'd get eclipses every month and no Full Moon or New Moon. However, because space is three-dimensional and the Moon's orbit is NOT flat, we can have a lot of Full and New Moons and very few eclipses.

Thus, The amount of Moon we see grows or waxes from its right side to its left side between the new and full Moons. The amount of illumination reduces or wanes from right to left as it approaches the full Moon.

For more information about the Full moon refer to the link:

https://brainly.com/question/16347236