Will Mars and the moon will appear the same size in 2018? Gosh, no. What’s really amazing is the staying power of this hoax, which has its roots in a real 15-year cycle of Mars, that’s peaking – giving us an excellent year to observe Mars – in 2018. You’re likely to see it as an email – or on social media – in the form of a claim that Mars will appear as large as a full moon in Earth’s sky on a particular date. Sometimes there’s a suggestion that Mars and Earth’s moon will appear as a double moon. I’ve also seen the photo above, circulating on Facebook. And that is just not true. It’s not true in 2018. It’s never been true. It never will be true. Here’s a sample of what the hoax typically says:
SEE MARS AS LARGE AS THE FULL MOON. Should be spectacular! Truly a once in a lifetime experience!
It sounds amazing! Can it possibly be true?
No. It can’t.
Mars can never appear as large as a full moon as seen from Earth. As seen from Earth, in months when Mars does appear side by side with a full moon, Mars’ diameter appears, on average, about 1/140th the diameter of the full moon.
In other words, you’d have to line up 140 planet Mars – side by side – to equal the moon’s diameter.
Earth and Mars will have a particularly close opposition in mid-2018. Mars has already bumped Jupiter out of the second-brightest planet slot; Mars will be brighter than Jupiter from about July 7 to about September 7, 2018. Mars’ opposition – when we pass between it and the sun – comes on July 27. Mars will be closest to us on July 31. Around that time, Mars will be closer than it’s been since 2003! It’ll be bright and very reddish! Like a dot of flame.
No doubt the Mars-as-big-as-the-moon and double moon rumors will be flying!
And that’ll probably be especially true because – on the night of Mars’ opposition, July 27 – Mars will appear near the full moon.
Ah, Mars. World of dreams and visions. Mars is the world orbiting one step outward from Earth’s orbit. This world is slightly smaller than Earth – but slightly larger than Earth’s moon. Mars is also much much farther away than Earth’s moon. It’s hard to comprehend what little specks the planets and moons are in contrast to the vastness of space, but let me put it this way. Earth’s moon is about a light-second away. Traveling at 186,000 miles per second, light bouncing from the moon’s surface takes about a second to reach us here on Earth. Meanwhile, light from Mars takes much much longer to reach Earth – from several minutes to about 20 minutes – with the difference being the result of Earth’s and Mars’ motions around the sun. In other words, when Mars is on the same side of the sun as Earth, its distance from us is less than when it’s on the far side of the sun from us.
The moon is much closer than Mars, and that’s why we see the moon as a bright disk in our sky. Meanwhile – to the eye – Mars never appears as anything but a reddish starlike point.
So how did this rumor of Mars-as-big-and-bright-as-the-moon get started? It started with an actual (though much more subtle) event in 2003. On August 27 of that year, Earth and Mars came very slightly closer than they’d been in nearly 60,000 years. Center-to-center, Earth and Mars were less than 35 million miles apart (about 56 million km) – just over three light-minutes apart. The last people to come so close to Mars were Neanderthals. Astronomy writers like me had a field day that year, talking about Mars at its closest. Was it a spectacular sight? Yes!
Was Mars as big and bright as the moon, even at its closest in 2003? Never. But the legend continues …
The 2003 event was part of that 15-year cycle for Mars, mentioned above. Think of Earth and Mars in orbit around the sun again. Neither Earth nor Mars has a circular orbit. Both worlds have elliptical orbits … like squashed circles. So both Earth and Mars have a closest point to the sun. Maybe you can see that – when Earth passes between the sun and Mars (opposition) around the time Mars is closest to the sun (perihelion) – Earth and Mars come closest. The diagram below, used with the kind permission of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, helps show why.
Bottom line: Mars can never appear as large as a full moon in Earth’s sky. The email – or social media – claims to the contrary are a hoax. However, 2018 will be an excellent year for Mars. Watch for this hoax to rev up as Mars brightens in our sky, culminating in an extra bright Mars (but still, a starlike Mars) around late July.
Read more: Mars brighter in 2018 than since 2003
from EarthSky https://ift.tt/1q1eCvO
Will Mars and the moon will appear the same size in 2018? Gosh, no. What’s really amazing is the staying power of this hoax, which has its roots in a real 15-year cycle of Mars, that’s peaking – giving us an excellent year to observe Mars – in 2018. You’re likely to see it as an email – or on social media – in the form of a claim that Mars will appear as large as a full moon in Earth’s sky on a particular date. Sometimes there’s a suggestion that Mars and Earth’s moon will appear as a double moon. I’ve also seen the photo above, circulating on Facebook. And that is just not true. It’s not true in 2018. It’s never been true. It never will be true. Here’s a sample of what the hoax typically says:
SEE MARS AS LARGE AS THE FULL MOON. Should be spectacular! Truly a once in a lifetime experience!
It sounds amazing! Can it possibly be true?
No. It can’t.
Mars can never appear as large as a full moon as seen from Earth. As seen from Earth, in months when Mars does appear side by side with a full moon, Mars’ diameter appears, on average, about 1/140th the diameter of the full moon.
In other words, you’d have to line up 140 planet Mars – side by side – to equal the moon’s diameter.
Earth and Mars will have a particularly close opposition in mid-2018. Mars has already bumped Jupiter out of the second-brightest planet slot; Mars will be brighter than Jupiter from about July 7 to about September 7, 2018. Mars’ opposition – when we pass between it and the sun – comes on July 27. Mars will be closest to us on July 31. Around that time, Mars will be closer than it’s been since 2003! It’ll be bright and very reddish! Like a dot of flame.
No doubt the Mars-as-big-as-the-moon and double moon rumors will be flying!
And that’ll probably be especially true because – on the night of Mars’ opposition, July 27 – Mars will appear near the full moon.
Ah, Mars. World of dreams and visions. Mars is the world orbiting one step outward from Earth’s orbit. This world is slightly smaller than Earth – but slightly larger than Earth’s moon. Mars is also much much farther away than Earth’s moon. It’s hard to comprehend what little specks the planets and moons are in contrast to the vastness of space, but let me put it this way. Earth’s moon is about a light-second away. Traveling at 186,000 miles per second, light bouncing from the moon’s surface takes about a second to reach us here on Earth. Meanwhile, light from Mars takes much much longer to reach Earth – from several minutes to about 20 minutes – with the difference being the result of Earth’s and Mars’ motions around the sun. In other words, when Mars is on the same side of the sun as Earth, its distance from us is less than when it’s on the far side of the sun from us.
The moon is much closer than Mars, and that’s why we see the moon as a bright disk in our sky. Meanwhile – to the eye – Mars never appears as anything but a reddish starlike point.
So how did this rumor of Mars-as-big-and-bright-as-the-moon get started? It started with an actual (though much more subtle) event in 2003. On August 27 of that year, Earth and Mars came very slightly closer than they’d been in nearly 60,000 years. Center-to-center, Earth and Mars were less than 35 million miles apart (about 56 million km) – just over three light-minutes apart. The last people to come so close to Mars were Neanderthals. Astronomy writers like me had a field day that year, talking about Mars at its closest. Was it a spectacular sight? Yes!
Was Mars as big and bright as the moon, even at its closest in 2003? Never. But the legend continues …
The 2003 event was part of that 15-year cycle for Mars, mentioned above. Think of Earth and Mars in orbit around the sun again. Neither Earth nor Mars has a circular orbit. Both worlds have elliptical orbits … like squashed circles. So both Earth and Mars have a closest point to the sun. Maybe you can see that – when Earth passes between the sun and Mars (opposition) around the time Mars is closest to the sun (perihelion) – Earth and Mars come closest. The diagram below, used with the kind permission of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, helps show why.
Bottom line: Mars can never appear as large as a full moon in Earth’s sky. The email – or social media – claims to the contrary are a hoax. However, 2018 will be an excellent year for Mars. Watch for this hoax to rev up as Mars brightens in our sky, culminating in an extra bright Mars (but still, a starlike Mars) around late July.
Read more: Mars brighter in 2018 than since 2003
from EarthSky https://ift.tt/1q1eCvO
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