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Here comes Mars
madison.com Madison Newspapers Inc., publishers of the Wisconsin State Journal, | 8-16-03 | By Heather Lee Schroeder

Posted on 08/17/2003 5:16:09 PM PDT by Temple Owl

Here comes Mars

Earth's closest matchup with the Red Planet will happen Aug. 27

By Heather Lee Schroeder August 16, 2003

In all of recorded human history, it is only the Earth civilization of 2003 that can claim a close encounter of the red kind.

Mars, dubbed the Red Planet for its reddish-orange hue, will be within 35 million miles of Earth (about one-third of the distance from the Earth to the sun) at the end of the month, the closest it has been in possibly 60,000 years.

It won't be this close again until about 2287.

With Mars so relatively close, it gives amateur astronomers their best chance to see Earth's neighbor from their own back yards, with or without a telescope or binoculars. It is easily visible to the naked eye in the southeastern sky shortly after nightfall.

And despite age-old tall tales of little green men from Mars, there is nothing to worry about, says Linda Sparke, who chairs the University of Wisconsin-Madison astronomy department.

"It's not going to attack us," she explained in her down-to-Earth way. "It's quite safe."

However, she said, "if they did, this would be the right time to send the spacecraft."

In fact, because of the proximity, NASA has launched two Mars rover spacecraft of its own (named Spirit and Opportunity) to take advantage of this celestial good fortune. Spirit launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., June 10 and will arrive at Mars on Jan. 4, 2004. Opportunity was launched July 7 and will arrive Jan. 25, 2004.

Right now Earth is orbiting between the sun and Mars, in what astronomers call "opposition." Mars will also be in conjunction (that is, the sun will be directly behind Earth and in line with Mars), so the Red Planet will be fully illuminated - no crescent.

Oppositions with Mars happen regularly, every two years or so, but this one is different because Mars will be much closer to Earth and its path will afford viewers a closer view of the fourth planet from the sun.

On Aug. 27, the Earth will pass within 34.7 million miles of Mars.

If that seems quite a distance, compare it to the nearest star beyond our own sun. Andrew Fox, a graduate student in the UW astronomy department, said that if someone were standing on the nearest star and flashed a light, that signal would take four years to reach Earth. If the same were to happen from Mars on Aug. 27, it would take the light just three minutes to arrive.

The planet will be so bright, in fact, that stargazers can watch it rise in the east after 9 p.m. By the end of this month, the planet will be rising about 9 p.m. Look for a constant bright shape that is reddish-orange in color, Fox advises.

"You'll really be able to tell the difference between Mars and the other stars," he said.

Astronomers predict they will get a large number of phone calls from members of the public who, after seeing Mars on the horizon, will assume they've just had a close encounter.

"We're expecting a lot of false identifications this summer," Fox said.

Unlike viewing the sun, watching Mars with the naked eye is fine, says James Lattis, director of the UW Space Place, but the best way to experience the opposition of Mars is to get to a telescope. With a lens, viewers should be able to see some details, like the planet's polar caps and its geological features.

"This is the kind of event where a telescope is an appropriate tool," Lattis said.

There are a number of local and statewide events planned that will allow visitors to view Mars through a lens. However, real enthusiasts might want to dust off their own telescope or invest in a lens.

A decent telescope costs about $200 to $300, Lattis said. They're not easy to find locally, but he advises checking with Wild Birds Unlimited or Eagle Optics.

More importantly, if you decide to use your own lens, Lattis said, it's important to get out with it during the day and practice setting it up and focusing it. Don't worry so much about light pollution, he added. Mars is bright enough that it will be visible regardless of ambient light in the atmosphere.

While amateur astronomers all over Dane County are gearing up for many nights of stargazing, the UW staff isn't quite so excited.

"The reason the professionals are sort of bored is that we knew this was going to happen," Sparke said. "We can predict this sort of stuff. It's not like it caught us by surprise."

Moreover, Mars is notorious for having wild dust storms that obscure visibility on its surface. Or as Madison Astronomical Society member Tim Ellestad explained, "This is the opportunity for the stargazer. We're sending probes to Mars. We're long past what we're going to learn peering through the telescope. This is purely for the observing experience for the amateur, but that's pretty fun."

The Madison Astronomical Society maintains its own observatory - which due to insurance concerns is in an undisclosed location. ("It's probably in as dark a site as we're going to get with the convenience of one day's worth of driving," Ellestad said.) Members are using that lens, as well as their own telescopes, to view Mars.

For any astronomer - amateur or professional - the art of the pastime lies partly in its difficulties. Weather concerns and atmospheric conditions top the astronomer's list of problems, Ellestad said.

Unlike the Hubble Space Telescope, which captures perfect electronic images, a viewer using a lens on the Earth's surface must contend with the limits of his or her own body and the motion in the atmosphere. The human eye and brain perceive that minute motion in much the same way a mirage on a hot day is seen. The image shimmers or even blurs. With the tiny size of astronomer's targets, the star or planet may wiggle or swim or never be in focus no matter what - depending, of course, on the amount or type of disturbance.

Professional astronomers call this "the seeing," as in "The seeing was good on Saturday night."

"We don't live in a place on Earth that has the most spectacular seeing conditions," Ellestad said of the Madison area.

So when a planet gets this close, it offers up a good opportunity for better seeing. Normally it takes exceptional seeing conditions and an excellent telescope to observe Mars' detail, but Ellestad said the larger the planet, the better the seeing.

"As images go, Mars is dinky," he said. "Any time it's notably closer, it's a substantially improved opportunity to see some detail on the planet."

And since most amateur astronomers come to the hobby with a sense of awe or fascination and a hope to relate to the scale of the universe, looking at planets is perhaps the most satisfying of experiences, he added.

Professional astronomers enjoy events like this because they attract the general public to their science.

"This kind of (planetary) opposition, while it's not terribly important for astronomical research, is very important in that it's a great opportunity for the public to get a good look at a neighboring planet," Lattis said.

He added: "We gain insight into our place on Earth and in the universe as a whole. These are important things that get lost in the day-to-day business of life."

Astronomy and NASA also could use a good shoring up right now, particularly after the shuttle disaster, the astronomers say.

"Astronomy is a science that is very sensitive to public opinion," Fox said. "Something like this is viewed as a chance to get astronomy back into a good public opinion."

That's why the UW astronomy department and the Madison Astronomical Society are working hard to get people out looking at Mars thismonth. Sparke said her department's goal is to show people the night sky above their head and familiarize them with its mysteries.

"Maybe if people start looking, they'll look more often," she said. "If you get used to looking, you can start to track changes in the sky."

That, of course, is what our ancestors did - before the advent of clocks and calendars. They used the constellations to mark the turning of seasons. Reconnecting people to that celestial past is important, Sparke said.

E-mail: hls@madison.com

Published: 11:32 AM 8/15/03

Return to story madison.com is operated by Madison Newspapers Inc., publishers of the Wisconsin State Journal, The Capital Times, Agri-View and Apartment Showcase. All contents Copyright ©, Madison Newspapers, Inc. All rights reserved.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mars
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This looks like something that should have been posted before, but I put a search on it and nothing came up.

Anyway I intend to go look at the southeastern sky and see of I can spot the "Red Planet."

Please let me know if you see anything.

1 posted on 08/17/2003 5:16:09 PM PDT by Temple Owl
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To: Temple Owl
you can't miss it. It is huge in the sky. Too bad NASA has fallen apart. We should be on Mars now. [Although my kids have been there for years.]

Red

2 posted on 08/17/2003 5:19:41 PM PDT by Conservative4Ever (life is but a dream...Sha Boom)
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To: Temple Owl
I viewed Mars the other day at the Vanderbilt University Dyer Observatory through their 24' mirror. Frankly, I thought a recent viewing I made through a 14' Celestron was more impressive.
3 posted on 08/17/2003 5:21:42 PM PDT by zarf (Dan Rather is god.)
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To: Temple Owl
I'll be watching.......
4 posted on 08/17/2003 5:23:07 PM PDT by b4its2late (Every time I think about exercise, I lie down, look up towards Mars, till the thought goes away.)
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To: zarf
or should I say...the other evening...
5 posted on 08/17/2003 5:23:50 PM PDT by zarf (Dan Rather is god.)
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To: Temple Owl
I've been keeping an eye on it the last couple of nights.
Next to the moon, its the brightest bulb in the sky.
6 posted on 08/17/2003 5:24:50 PM PDT by ThreePuttinDude (Its rather funny "how good"....." we use to be"??)
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To: Temple Owl
Unlike viewing the sun, watching Mars with the naked eye is fine, says James Lattis, director of the UW Space Place.

Whew! That is good news. I was losing sleep over that one.

7 posted on 08/17/2003 5:26:40 PM PDT by SamAdams76 (Back in boot camp! 230.6 (-69.4))
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To: Temple Owl
When was the last time Mars was this close?
8 posted on 08/17/2003 5:29:32 PM PDT by Domestic Church (AMDG..)
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To: Temple Owl
We haven't had a nighttime view of the sky in months down here. Wish the clouds would go away. I'm missing Mars and the meteor showers.
9 posted on 08/17/2003 5:31:51 PM PDT by gitmo (Moderation in all things? Isn't that a little extreme?)
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To: Temple Owl
Took my boys outside with binoculars to see Mars. For some reason they had been thinking that Mars would be larger than the Moon.

When I showed them Mars they said: "That's all there is???" and went back inside to their Playstation.

Sheesh.

10 posted on 08/17/2003 5:32:27 PM PDT by FReepaholic (My other tag line is hilarious.)
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To: Conservative4Ever
Just clouds and drizzle over southeastern Pa.Maybe I'll have better luck tomorrow.
11 posted on 08/17/2003 5:33:50 PM PDT by Temple Owl
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Didn't "The War Of The Worlds" start out like this?

Maybe they'll start with France....

12 posted on 08/17/2003 5:35:21 PM PDT by RandallFlagg ("There are worse things than crucifixion...There are teeth.")
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To: Domestic Church
Last time it was "this close" was 57,617 BC according to Sky & Telescope magazine. However, in spite of all the publicity this time, it will be only about 5% closer than it was in 1988. Reasonably close approaches occur roughly every two years.
13 posted on 08/17/2003 5:43:54 PM PDT by 19th LA Inf
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To: Temple Owl
If you don't have a telescope, here's where you can find live video from Cave Creek Observatory, plus a live Mars webcam ('course, you have to wait until it's good and dark).

The webcam wasn't active last night, but the live video feed was. Both should be up and running on the big night, but don't be surprised if the website is flooded. So check it out tonight and every night up to the second week of September or so, if you can. The view shouldn't change too much in that period of time anyway.

I think both the live video feed and the webcam are shot through C11's (11" Celestrons), which isn't the best view in the world, but is a heck of a lot better than looking at Mars with binoculars or the naked eye. But hey, if you happen to have a nice 30" Dob, invite us over! :-)

14 posted on 08/17/2003 5:43:57 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker
Thank you.
15 posted on 08/17/2003 5:50:27 PM PDT by Temple Owl
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To: LibWhacker
I got up at 3 am to let my puppy out. It's clearly visible.
16 posted on 08/17/2003 5:59:42 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: aimhigh
Yep, I've been out every night for the last week looking at it. You can definitely tell it's not a star. And the reddish tint is a dead giveaway. Wish I hadn't packed up my binoculars.
17 posted on 08/17/2003 6:05:22 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Temple Owl
Unlike viewing the sun, watching Mars with the naked eye is fine, says James Lattis

Is it safe to view it completely naked?

18 posted on 08/17/2003 6:29:10 PM PDT by KarlInOhio (A flash mob of one.)
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To: Temple Owl
Opportunity was launched July 7 and will arrive Jan. 25, 2004.

The closeness we observe this month is not too relavant to the sending of spacecraft. It appears to take over six months to make the trip. What this might mean is that a month ago earth was in it's orbit close to where Mars will be in Jan 2004. I think this would make for the shortest trip. We also have to consider where Earth will be when we want to communicate with the craft on Mars. We can't do much if Earth is on the other side of the Sun from Mars!

There's alot more than meets to eye.

19 posted on 08/17/2003 6:33:12 PM PDT by George from New England
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To: Temple Owl
I just heard this on IRN

Here is the latest bulletin from the Intercontinental Radio News. Toronto, Canada:

Professor Morse of McGill University reports observing a total of three explosions on the planet Mars, between the hours of 7:45 P.M. and 9:20 P.M., eastern standard time. This confirms earlier reports received from American observatories. Now, nearer home, comes a special announcement from Trenton, New Jersey. It is reported that at 8:50 P.M. a huge, flaming object, believed to be a meteorite, fell on a farm in the neighborhood of Grovers Mill, New Jersey, twenty-two miles from Trenton.

The flash in the sky was visible within a radius of several hundred miles and the noise of the impact was heard as far north as Elizabeth.

We have dispatched a special mobile unit to the scene, and will have our commentator, Carl Phillips, give you a word desription as soon as he can reach there from Princeton. In the meantime, we take you to the Hotel Martinet in Brooklyn, where Bobby Millette and his orchestra are offering a program of dance music.

20 posted on 08/17/2003 6:47:18 PM PDT by Davea
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