As mentioned before, the sidereal period of an object depends on that object's alignment with the body it orbits and with a distant, background star. When we talk about the Moon, we need to clarify the difference between the sidereal month and the synodic month.
Last time, we talked about the lunar resonance, explaining why the same face of the Moon is always pointed towards Earth. When we measure the time from Full Moon to Full Moon (or New Moon to New Moon), it takes about 29.5 days to complete one cycle of phases. We call this the synodic month and it is also the reason why months are approximately 30 days. But the sidereal month is only 27.3 days. The reason why it is shorter than the synodic month is because as the Moon orbits the Earth, the Earth is also orbiting the Sun.
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