On Earth, nothing could feel as familiar as the passing of our seasons. And our days are steady, too — 24 hours, over and over, all our lives. But not so on Mars. Different world, just one step outward from Earth. Same laws of nature … but alien all the same. In this livestream, EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd explores the seasons on the Red Planet — and how even small differences in time and orbit can reshape our perception of a world. Watch in the player above or on YouTube.
Summer solstice in Mars’ southern hemisphere
Earth’s next solstice will fall at 8:25 UTC on June 21, 2026. It’ll be a summer solstice for the Northern Hemisphere (and a winter solstice for the Southern Hemisphere). It’ll happen when Earth’s south pole is tilted most toward the sun.
Like Earth, Mars tilts on its axis with respect to its orbit around the sun. It tilts by about 25 degrees, in contrast to Earth’s 23.5 degrees. So Mars has equinoxes and solstices as well. And Mars’ summer solstice for its southern hemisphere arrives on April 25, 2026.
Like Earth, Mars has 4 seasons
Mars takes 687 Earth-days to orbit the sun once. That’s almost 2 Earth-years. So each season on Mars – winter, spring, summer, fall – lasts roughly twice as long as a season on Earth.
And, meanwhile, although the image below is exaggerated, the orbit of Mars is more squashed than that of Earth. Astronomers say it’s more elliptical. Mars is farther from the sun during southern winter … and closer during southern summer. So the Mars southern hemisphere has shorter, hotter, more extreme seasons.
So – now, in April 2026, as Mars’ northern hemisphere of is tipping into the deepest part of winter – its southern hemisphere is celebrating summer. Of course, nothing is blooming. To date, scientists haven’t confirmed life on Mars, today or in the past. But there’s still seasonal change, just as there is in the most Mars-like places on Earth … Antarctica, for example.
The season of dust
And on Mars, the seasons aren’t equal. That’s because Mars’ seasons are more lopsided than on Earth. Mars’ orbit is more squashed (more elliptical) than Earth’s. So its closest points to the sun are relatively closer than Earth’s. And Mars’ closest point to the sun – its perihelion – always happens near the Mars southern summer. In 2026, perihelion for Mars happened in late March.
So Mars is relatively closest to the sun, moving fastest in orbit, around the time of late spring or early summer in its southern hemisphere. That’s why the Mars southern summers are shorter, hotter, and more volatile than in the north. That’s when dust storms can kick up, sometimes growing large enough to wrap around the entire planet. In the image below – from the Hubble Space Telescope in 2018 – you can see what that looks like. No surface features are visible because – for some months in 2018, centered on the Martian southern summer – Mars was shrouded in dust.
What’s happening on Mars now?
As of April 2026, atmospheric conditions on the Red Planet are relatively clear.
Current Martian weather stats – formed from recent data from the Perseverance and Curiosity rovers (the only two rovers active on Mars now) indicate “very dusty conditions” locally at certain craters. But these are localized events. And Mars is now entering a season where localized dust activity typically increases.
On average, global storms happen once every 3 to 4 Mars-years. That’s about every 5-and-a-half to 8 Earth-years. We haven’t had a a truly huge, global Mars dust storm since 2018.
So the “watch” is officially on for Mars dust in 2026.
And the current Martian season – summer in the southern hemisphere, officially starting on April 25, 2026 – is the primary reason for anticipation.
Bottom line: The summer solstice on Mars’ southern hemisphere happens on April 25, 2026. At that time, the south pole of Mars is pointed most directly toward the sun.
Read more: Is there a North Star for Mars?
The post Summer solstice in Mars’ southern hemisphere is April 25 first appeared on EarthSky.
from EarthSky https://ift.tt/IDF1skc
On Earth, nothing could feel as familiar as the passing of our seasons. And our days are steady, too — 24 hours, over and over, all our lives. But not so on Mars. Different world, just one step outward from Earth. Same laws of nature … but alien all the same. In this livestream, EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd explores the seasons on the Red Planet — and how even small differences in time and orbit can reshape our perception of a world. Watch in the player above or on YouTube.
Summer solstice in Mars’ southern hemisphere
Earth’s next solstice will fall at 8:25 UTC on June 21, 2026. It’ll be a summer solstice for the Northern Hemisphere (and a winter solstice for the Southern Hemisphere). It’ll happen when Earth’s south pole is tilted most toward the sun.
Like Earth, Mars tilts on its axis with respect to its orbit around the sun. It tilts by about 25 degrees, in contrast to Earth’s 23.5 degrees. So Mars has equinoxes and solstices as well. And Mars’ summer solstice for its southern hemisphere arrives on April 25, 2026.
Like Earth, Mars has 4 seasons
Mars takes 687 Earth-days to orbit the sun once. That’s almost 2 Earth-years. So each season on Mars – winter, spring, summer, fall – lasts roughly twice as long as a season on Earth.
And, meanwhile, although the image below is exaggerated, the orbit of Mars is more squashed than that of Earth. Astronomers say it’s more elliptical. Mars is farther from the sun during southern winter … and closer during southern summer. So the Mars southern hemisphere has shorter, hotter, more extreme seasons.
So – now, in April 2026, as Mars’ northern hemisphere of is tipping into the deepest part of winter – its southern hemisphere is celebrating summer. Of course, nothing is blooming. To date, scientists haven’t confirmed life on Mars, today or in the past. But there’s still seasonal change, just as there is in the most Mars-like places on Earth … Antarctica, for example.
The season of dust
And on Mars, the seasons aren’t equal. That’s because Mars’ seasons are more lopsided than on Earth. Mars’ orbit is more squashed (more elliptical) than Earth’s. So its closest points to the sun are relatively closer than Earth’s. And Mars’ closest point to the sun – its perihelion – always happens near the Mars southern summer. In 2026, perihelion for Mars happened in late March.
So Mars is relatively closest to the sun, moving fastest in orbit, around the time of late spring or early summer in its southern hemisphere. That’s why the Mars southern summers are shorter, hotter, and more volatile than in the north. That’s when dust storms can kick up, sometimes growing large enough to wrap around the entire planet. In the image below – from the Hubble Space Telescope in 2018 – you can see what that looks like. No surface features are visible because – for some months in 2018, centered on the Martian southern summer – Mars was shrouded in dust.
What’s happening on Mars now?
As of April 2026, atmospheric conditions on the Red Planet are relatively clear.
Current Martian weather stats – formed from recent data from the Perseverance and Curiosity rovers (the only two rovers active on Mars now) indicate “very dusty conditions” locally at certain craters. But these are localized events. And Mars is now entering a season where localized dust activity typically increases.
On average, global storms happen once every 3 to 4 Mars-years. That’s about every 5-and-a-half to 8 Earth-years. We haven’t had a a truly huge, global Mars dust storm since 2018.
So the “watch” is officially on for Mars dust in 2026.
And the current Martian season – summer in the southern hemisphere, officially starting on April 25, 2026 – is the primary reason for anticipation.
Bottom line: The summer solstice on Mars’ southern hemisphere happens on April 25, 2026. At that time, the south pole of Mars is pointed most directly toward the sun.
Read more: Is there a North Star for Mars?
The post Summer solstice in Mars’ southern hemisphere is April 25 first appeared on EarthSky.
from EarthSky https://ift.tt/IDF1skc
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