homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Today is Mars opposition - best time to see the red planet with the naked eye

The term Mars opposition basically refers to a geometric event. Thus on the 3rd of March, Mars will appear exactly opposite the sun in Earth’s sky, 180 degrees away from it, as well as come at one of the closest distances to Earth, making it easy observable even with the naked eye. This event takes […]

Tibi Puiu
March 3, 2012 @ 7:12 am

share Share

Mars-opposition The term Mars opposition basically refers to a geometric event. Thus on the 3rd of March, Mars will appear exactly opposite the sun in Earth’s sky, 180 degrees away from it, as well as come at one of the closest distances to Earth, making it easy observable even with the naked eye.

This event takes place every two years and two months, so if you’ve got some astro-gear stacked up somewhere in your attic, now’s a good a time as any to try it out again. Tonight, Mars will be about 62.6 million miles away from Earth, making it almost impossible to miss with the naked eye, even in the brightest city skies. Amazingly enough, however, there was a previous opposition that was even more spectacular. If some of you might remember, on Aug. 30, 2003, the last favorable opposition date, Mars was positioned at half the distance it is now from Earth, around ~30 million miles away – effectively making it appear twice as big as it will be tonight.

As the sun will set in the west, look in the opposite direction to the east for a pale red color – it should appear visible about an hour after sunset. For some reason, if you are unable to catch the sight or if you’re looking for magnified view, but don’t have a telescope, you can check out the online Slooh Space Camera stream. At the stream, this Saturday night, which will be hosted by some astronomy experts, you’ll be able to have an enchanting view of the planet from a variety of observatories including those in Arizona and the Canary Islands. The observations will be so focused that you’ll be able to pick out surface features such as canyons, volcanoes and polar caps on the red planet’s surface.

share Share

Are aliens real? Here's what the scientists think

A groundbreaking survey in Nature Astronomy reveals a surprising consensus among scientists: the majority believe that alien life exists.

China plans to put a flag on the moon in 2026 — one that flutters using electromagnetic forces

Beyond this symbolic achievement, the mission aims to explore the Moon’s south pole, searching for water ice and resources essential for future human exploration.

Drones Helps Researchers Uncover a Lost Mega-Fortress in Georgia

Researchers have long known about the formidable scale of the Dmanisis Gora fortress, but a recent study has unveiled its true magnitude. Using drone-based imagery and photogrammetry, a team of scientists has revealed that this 3,000-year-old structure in the Caucasus Mountains spans an astonishing 60 to 80 hectares. A cultural crossroads The South Caucasus is […]

Pluto in Focus: From Pixelated Smudge to Stunning, Geology-Rich World

NASA’s New Horizons mission revolutionized our view of Pluto, revealing a vibrant, geologically active world full of surprises.

That super valuable asteroid worth 100 bajillion dollars? JWST images show it's rusting

We may or may not mine the asteroid — but in the meantime, researchers are finding out more things about it.

This European satellite can track nitrogen dioxide — and it wasn't meant to

The satellites are even more potent than we thought.

Astronomers use JWST to peer into the heart of the Crab Nebula

Scientific papers rarely have images this spectacular in them.

Astronomers discover oldest black hole -- and it's much larger than it should be

The discovery might up-end how scientists believe black holes form.

"Diamond rain" on icy planets has unexpected connection to magnetic fields

Experiments with X-ray lasers simulate space conditions.

NASA just mapped all the planet's surface minerals in arid regions

The scale of this project is truly spectacular.