Planet Mars will be opposite and closest to the Sun in the sky on
October 13.
Planet Mars will
be opposite and closest to the Sun in the sky on October 13.
On that date, Mars
will be at opposition -- opposite the Sun in the sky. Earth will be situated
directly between Mars and the Sun. As a result, Mars will rise as the Sun sets
and sets as the Sun rises, according to Sky & Telescope.
Opposition -- the
most significant Martian date on stargazers' calendars -- is also when the
planet is at its brightest and near its maximum apparent size in telescopes.
Because of the shapes and orientations of the planets' orbits, however, Mars
and Earth were actually closest on Tuesday, October 6, separated by just 62 million
kilometres, said Sky & Telescope.
For Mars, it is
more than 160 times farther than the Moon. The planet would not be this near us
again until 2035.
Mars oppositions
occur at roughly 26-month intervals when Earth catches up to Mars as the
planets circle the Sun.
This year's
opposition is special because it occurs close to when Mars reaches the point in
its orbit that is closest to the Sun,
called perihelion.
The planet's orbit
is distinctly out of round (its eccentricity is 0.09 versus 0.00 for a perfect
circle), so at times Mars can be up to 21 million kilometres closer or farther
from the Sun than average. This year the Red Planet reached perihelion on
August 3 and since that date has slowly been moving farther from the Sun.
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