Why the Moon Dominates Night Sky Photography
On a moonless night under dark skies, the background sky brightness is roughly magnitude 21–22 per square arcsecond — dark enough to reveal the faint galactic core, tendrils of nebulosity, and the Milky Way's full structure. Add a half-lit moon and that background brightens by two to three magnitudes, washing out anything faint and giving the sky a washed-out grey-blue cast that no amount of editing will fully recover.
Unlike cloud cover, which you can wait out, or light pollution, which you can drive away from, the moon follows a fixed schedule. Its phase and position for any given night are fully predictable months in advance. That makes moon phase the most plannable variable in astrophotography — and the one most photographers underestimate until they drive two hours to a dark site and find a half-moon rising at 10pm.
Moon phase is the most plannable variable in astrophotography. There's no excuse for being caught off guard by it.
Each Phase: What It Means for Your Shoot
The lunar cycle runs approximately 29.5 days from new moon to new moon. Here's how each phase affects your shoot:
The waning crescent is worth special attention. Because it rises in the early morning hours, it gives you a full dark window in the evening before it appears — making late-cycle crescent nights nearly as useful as new moon nights for early-evening Milky Way shoots.
Illumination Thresholds by Subject
The impact of lunar illumination varies significantly by what you're photographing. Not all astrophotography requires a new moon:
| Subject | Max usable illumination | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Milky Way core | Under 25% | Extremely sensitive. Even a thin crescent above the horizon will wash out the faint galactic core structure. |
| Deep sky objects (broadband) | Under 30% | Galaxies and reflection nebulae require dark skies. Similar sensitivity to Milky Way shooting. |
| Emission nebulae (narrowband) | Up to 80% | Narrowband filters (Ha, OIII, SII) isolate specific wavelengths, dramatically reducing sky glow impact. Popular for imaging under suburban skies and bright moons. |
| Star trails | Up to 60% | Moon can be used intentionally to light the foreground. Requires managing exposure length and stacking strategy to avoid sky blowout. |
| Planetary imaging | Any phase | Moon phase is irrelevant for planetary work. Atmospheric seeing and planetary opposition are the limiting factors. |
| Wide field landscape-astro | Up to 40% | A crescent moon can actually improve landscape-astro by illuminating foreground elements. Requires careful timing around moonrise and moonset. |
Moonrise and Moonset: More Important Than Phase Alone
Phase tells you how bright the moon is. Position tells you when the sky is actually dark. These are different questions, and both matter.
A first-quarter moon (50% illuminated) rises around noon and sets around midnight — meaning the sky is fully dark from midnight until dawn. A last-quarter moon rises around midnight and sets around noon — meaning you get a full dark window in the evening. Same illumination percentage, completely different usable window.
Your usable shoot window is the period when the moon is below the horizon AND astronomical twilight has ended. On a waxing crescent night, that window is evening. On a waning crescent night, it's the hours before dawn. Plan your shoot around the moon's rise and set times for your specific date and location, not just its phase.
This also means that a 40% illuminated waning crescent — which sounds marginal — can be an excellent night if the moon doesn't rise until 3am and you're shooting from 10pm to 2am. Conversely, a 30% waxing crescent is borderline useless if moonrise is at 8pm and you're in a location where the galactic core peaks before midnight.
The two-variable check before any shoot: illumination percentage and moonrise/moonset time for your location and date. When both favor you, you've found a target night.
Starcast calculates moon phase, rise and set times, cloud cover, and Bortle class together into a single night sky score. Set a threshold and get an email alert when conditions are worth going out for.
How Starcast Tracks Moon Phase for You
Starcast combines moon illumination, moonrise and moonset times, cloud cover, atmospheric transparency, and Bortle-adjusted sky darkness into a single score for any location and date. Moon phase isn't displayed as a calendar lookup — it's weighted directly into the score so a 90% illuminated night scores low regardless of how clear the sky is.
Starcast applies a direct illumination penalty scaled to moon percentage. A 10% crescent costs a few points. An 80% gibbous drops the score significantly regardless of cloud cover or transparency. You see the moon's impact reflected in the score, not in a separate field you have to mentally combine.
The forecast card shows the best shoot window based on when astronomical darkness begins and when the moon is below the horizon. For waning crescent nights it shows the evening window. For waxing crescent nights it shows the pre-moonrise window. The qualifier line — "Best before midnight" or "Best after midnight" — is calculated from your specific moonrise and moonset for that location and date.
Email alerts are sent roughly one hour before astronomical dark begins, giving you time to drive to your location. Alerts only fire when the score meets your threshold — so a night with good transparency but a bright moon won't trigger a false positive.
Moon illumination · Rise & set times · Cloud cover · Bortle class
All combined into one Starcast score.