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Five Things About Viewing Mars in August

Jane Houston Jones
Jane Houston Jones

If you’re like me, you may have received an e-mail this summer telling you go outside on August 27 and look up in the sky. The e-mail, most likely forwarded to you by a friend or relative, promises that Mars will look as big as the moon on that date, and that no one will ever see this view again. Hmmm, it looks like the same e-mail I received last summer and the summer before that, too. In fact this same e-mail has been circulating since 2003, but with a few important omissions from the original announcement.

I’m Jane Jones, an amateur astronomer and outreach specialist for the Cassini mission at Saturn, and I’m here to set the record straight on when and how you can actually see Mars this month.

 

1. How did the “Mars in August” e-mail get started in the first place?

In 2003, when Mars neared opposition — its closest approach to Earth in its 22-month orbit around the sun — it was less than 56 million kilometers (less than 35 million miles) away. This was the closest it had been in over 50,000 years. The e-mail that circulated back then said that Mars, when viewed through a telescope magnified 75 times, would look as large as the moon does with the unaided eye. Even back in 2003, to the unaided eye, Mars looked like a reddish star in the sky to our eyes, and through a backyard telescope it looked like a small disc with some dark markings and maybe a hint of its polar ice cap. Without magnification, it never looked as large as the moon, even back in 2003!

2. Can the moon and Mars ever look the same size?

No. The moon is one-quarter the size of Earth and is relatively close — only about 384,000 kilometers (about 239, 000 miles) away. On the other hand, Mars is one-half the size of Earth and it orbits the sun 1-1/2 times farther out than Earth’s orbit. The closest it ever gets to Earth is at opposition every 26 months. The next opposition is in January 2010.

Mars Chart
A sky chart shows where Mars will be in August. Image credit: NASA/JPL.
› View full image

At that time, Mars will be 98 million kilometers (61 million miles) from Earth, almost twice as far as in 2003. So from that distance, Mars could never look the same as our moon.

3. Is Mars visible in August 2009?

Mars rises in the east at about 1:30 a.m. this month and is best seen closer to dawn. It is a ruddy star-like object about the same brightness as the brightest stars you’ll see. Look for Mars above the constellation Orion in the pre-dawn sky. The moon is close by on the mornings of August 15 and 16. The brighter object in the sky below and left of Mars is Venus!

4. Can I see Mars and the moon at the same time this month?

If you get up before sunrise on August 15 and 16, you can see the waning crescent moon pass by Mars. The next two mornings, August 17 and 18, you’ll see the moon pass by Venus, which is the bright object below Mars in the morning sky. This will be a great time to compare the sizes of the moon and Mars for yourself!

5. Will the “Mars in August” e-mail return next year?

Most certainly! But next year, you’ll be armed with facts, and perhaps you will have looked at the red planet for yourself and will know what to expect. And you will know exactly where to put that email. In the trash!

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    14 Responses to “Five Things About Viewing Mars in August”

  1. Leanne Says:
    August 11th, 2009 at 2:17 pm

    Thank you! Now that the word NASA is in the web adress, hopefully my in-laws will finally believe me. :)

  2. Dale Nartker Says:
    August 11th, 2009 at 5:26 pm

    Jane,
    Thanks for addressing this ridiculous email hoax. I teach an outreach program here where I live in Preston ID and get approached with this question all the time. I had the rare privilege of viewing Mars on Aug 29 2003 through the Lowell refractor and was honored to see Mars up close like that; even saw Valles Marinaris and Solis Lacus and a few other craters with my own eye. Then and only then was it as big as a full moon or more through the telescope. Thanks for setting the record straight!

    Dale

  3. Ardelean Marius Says:
    August 11th, 2009 at 11:33 pm

    I didin’t received that e-mail but all my friends told me about Mars in August. I have been watching Mars several nights with my telescope and just like the article says it’s impossible to see Mars as big as the Moon.

  4. Fernando Says:
    August 12th, 2009 at 7:57 am

    Thank you so much for posting this! Mind if I translate to spanish and post in my blog?

    Jones says:

    Yes, please do!

  5. Dave Says:
    August 12th, 2009 at 8:43 am

    I’m the “local astronomer” in my workplace and I’ve had to deal with breathless, clueless people asking about this for the last 6 years. In each case I have to explain that it’s not 2003 anymore and that Mars is not going to be “as big as the moon” this August or any other time. Truly, I feel your pain.

  6. Paul Mallinson Says:
    August 15th, 2009 at 10:41 pm

    Hi Jane, thanks for your comments.

    Just one point ‘though. I don’t think any claim was made that Mars would look as big as the moon without a telescope. I think the comment made was that through a telescope, at some magnification, Mars could look as big as the moon (if the moon was in a convenient place at the time, you would have to open your other eye to compare the two!).

    The comparison would go something like this:
    The moon subtends about one half a degree in the sky - about 30 minutes of arc. If Mars is say 25 seconds of arc big (or 25/60 mins of arc), and the telescope magnification is 75x then multiplying (25/60*75) gives about 31 minutes of arc, which the size of the moon in the sky to the unaided eye!

    Cheers,
    Paul

  7. Mimi W Says:
    August 16th, 2009 at 9:05 pm

    I was in rural Wisconsin three nights ago and saw a huge red planet-looking
    image in the lowersky. If it wasn’t Mars, what might it have been?

  8. Melissa Says:
    August 19th, 2009 at 10:08 am

    My husband told me that this e-mail is a big lie, and now I’m going to tell everybody what is the true with real facts!

  9. Stephen Says:
    August 20th, 2009 at 1:47 am

    Thanks for your clear and understandable explanation. I thought it would be impossible for mars to look that big but these rumours become so powerful that those who cannot think for themselves will believe anything they hear.

  10. jason zermeno Says:
    August 20th, 2009 at 8:25 am

    Mimi,
    I am sitting here with my planetarium software and I entered you location and date into the program. Without knowing which direction you were looking and assuming that it was in the early evening I would venture to guess that you were either observing the reddish star, Antares, the brightest star in the constellation of Scorpius or the planet Jupiter. Antares would have been somewhere in the South-Southwest. At the same time in the East-Southeast you would have been able to see the bright, but not so reddish planet, Jupiter. To the naked eye both of these objects would appear as points of light, the planet Jupiter being quite a bit brighter and not twinkling as the stars do. If neither of these sound right, I’d love to hear more details of your observation.

  11. jason zermeno Says:
    August 20th, 2009 at 8:34 am

    While many people in the field/hobby of astronomy talk about how annoying and negative these “hoax” emails are I prefer to look at them as an educational opportunity to correct such misconceptions. The more that people think about the sky and astronomy the better, in my opinion. Maybe they will notice more the fact that they are able to see less and less of the beautiful night sky as light pollution increases!
    Could these controversial hoax messages be perpetuated by a clandestine cabal of concerned cosmologists? ;)

  12. Bonnie Says:
    August 20th, 2009 at 8:55 pm

    I just spent the last hour and a half trying to photograph “mars” with my 10x zoom camera to practice for Aug. 27th - I got some great pics and excitedly opened this site to learn more, only to read that it probably isn’t evenmars that I photographed since it is only midnight! I wonder what I took pictures of ? :-)

  13. Ferdaws Says:
    August 21st, 2009 at 6:12 am

    thanks ,
    i just read in forum that we can see Mars in 27 aug 2009 at same size of moon and i know that most of such information are lie for that i have try to search here
    but can we see it like start in this date??

  14. Roger Aranda Says:
    August 23rd, 2009 at 4:21 pm

    Thank you for placing rumors, in the “Fact Bag”
    I Told my friends, to look at the sky this Aug 27 (but told them that it was impossible
    that Mars looked like “two Moons in the Sky” as the Email said)
    Some of them might see Mars for the first time;thanks to this exagerated Notice

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