Looking up at the full moon tonight at ~ 6 p.m., it was easy to see Mars very close by. Although much smaller and not as bright, can you see Mars in the lower left corner?
As we drove home, Mars moved closer and closer to the Moon (visually), and eventually disappeared behind it. (I've since learned this is called a lunar occultation — the Moon eclipses Mars.)
I wondered how long it would take for Mars to reappear on the other side of the Moon. Here it is, now in the upper right corner, at a little after 8 p.m.:
So how big is Mars relative to the Moon and to the Earth? And how much farther away is Mars?
Diameters:
Mars = ~4,212 miles
Moon = ~2,159 miles
Earth = ~7,918 miles
Distances:
Earth to the Moon = ~238,855 miles (on average)
Earth to Mars = ~38 million miles tonight (the distance varies, but Mars is very close to Earth at this time)
With many thanks to the Cold Moon for an astronomy lesson tonight!
3 comments:
Hello ! I too watched the full moon and Mars last night! My birding/ spotting scope is ideal
for basic astronomy fun! The red planet was definitely looking red last night from Sebastopol.
Ran outside every 20 mins to check the occultation progress. Very cool. Um, cold. Brrrrr!
😁
Thanks for the "mind blowing" lesson re: the spacial aspect in space!
Really...THANKS!
Hi!
Sorry for the late reply, but thanks for your comments and appreciation of this planetary phenomenon. A fun one!
:) Jackie
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