Has any one been able to see the planet mars this month?
Pam said
08:30 PM Aug 14, 2010
where do I look and how do I know what i am looking at?
Gerty Dancer said
09:26 PM Aug 14, 2010
Is that the bright star near the moon around 6- 7pm?
Hylda&Jon said
09:59 PM Aug 14, 2010
I think I did without realizing it till you mentioned it, it was bloody big if i wasn't mistaken
capt cream bun said
12:22 AM Aug 15, 2010
The bight "star" near the moon is Venus....i think?
Chuck Norris was the first man on mars ! Thats why there is no signs of life left there!
capt cream bun said
12:24 AM Aug 15, 2010
capt cream bun wrote:
The bight "star" near the moon is Venus....i think?
Chuck Norris was the first man on mars ! Thats why there is no signs of life left there!
P.S. If you can see Chuck Norris he can see you. However if you cant see Chuck Norris you may be seconds away fron death!
justcruisin01 said
09:36 AM Aug 15, 2010
I am still trying to find it myself, just acting on the info from a email I received.
Any one else received this email, if not I will try to post some of the details.
Pam said
11:14 AM Aug 15, 2010
I googled mars and this came up in Wikipedia
Can you see Mars from Australia and if so when. If so what date will Mars be almost the same size as the moon?
In: Planetary Science, Planet Mars [Edit categories]
[Improve]
Welcome to the world of internet hype. Yes, Mars was as close to the Earth as it has gotten for 60,000 years (about 56 million kilometers). This did happen in August 2003. At that time it was 85 times brighter and 6 times larger than usual. However it does come almost as close and seems to be almost as bright every 15 to 17 years (you'd have o be a trained observer to see the difference)
Now about the "as large as a full moon" bit. Even at this maximum size, the planet Mars will still seem to be less than 2% of the size of the full moon. A bit of math shows that since Mars is about twice the diameter of the moon (6792 m vs. 3475 km) it would only appear to be as large as the moon if it were twice as far away (780,000 km based on the Earth to moon distance of 390,000 km). At 56 million kilometers Mars would only seem to be 1.4% of the full moon's diameter.
Next "close" visit is 2018.
There is a hoax email circulating (often associated with a virus) which makes the ridiculous claims about Mars' apparant size.
Mars is visible from Australia, and the times vary so check with astronomical data for your location.
Ole Grizzly said
01:36 PM Aug 15, 2010
Cast your eyes above the area of the set sun..first visible star is Mars.. Further up is Saturn And slightly more elevated to the right is Venus..our brightest star.
The 3 make an odd shaped triangle above where the sun had set.
GrumpyOne said
10:38 PM Aug 15, 2010
ET phone home........
No good to me.
I'm from Zeta Alpha 90-5 in the cignet quadrant of the Alpha Centaury system.....
Nanu Nanu
Beam me up Scotti there aint no intelligent life down here.......
Hoo Roo Happy Days
Cheers
Grumps
The bight "star" near the moon is Venus....i think?
Chuck Norris was the first man on mars ! Thats why there is no signs of life left there!
Any one else received this email, if not I will try to post some of the details.
Further up is Saturn
And slightly more elevated to the right is Venus..our brightest star.
The 3 make an odd shaped triangle above where the sun had set.