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katatonic
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posted March 25, 2010 11:03 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
Want a good look at Mars? Time’s running out
Optimal viewing won’t last much longer; next opportunity comes in 2012

Starry Night Software
Mars will be close to the moon on Thursday night, on its way to the far side of the sun. This chart shows the view looking south from mid-northern latitudes, with Mars and the moon between Leo's hook and Orion's belt.
View related photos

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Want a good look at Mars? Time’s running out

Springtime in space
See an active sun, a blooming "cosmic rose" and other cosmic highlights from March 2010.
more photos

By Geoff Gaherty
Starry Night Education

updated 5:17 p.m. PT, Wed., March. 24, 2010
On Thursday night, many people may look up at the sky and ask, "What's that bright star next to the moon?"

The answer for Thursday night is Mars, but that answer changes night by night as the moon travels along the ecliptic, the path that the sun, moon and planets follow across the sky. If you ask the question again on March 29, the answer will be the ringed planet Saturn.

Such conjunctions of the moon and planets are regular reminders of how rapidly the moon moves across the sky.

Mars was in opposition to the sun on Jan. 29, when it appeared 14 arcseconds in diameter, one-120th of the diameter of the moon. Two months later, it is much farther away, and has shrunk to only 10 arcseconds in diameter.

This will be your last chance to get a good look at Mars until it approaches the Earth again in 2012.

The sky on these spring evenings presents a striking contrast between its western half, filled with the bright stars and constellations of winter, and its eastern half, with Regulus the only bright star. Mars sits in solitary splendor in Cancer, one of the most insignificant zodiac constellations, just above the plane of the Milky Way.

But there is much lurking beyond the dim stars of spring, for we are entering the realm of the galaxies. The constellation Leo alone contains five of the brightest galaxies in Charles Messier's famous 18th-century catalog of deep sky objects.

When we look toward Leo, we are looking above the plane of our Milky Way galaxy at the depths of intergalactic space, unhindered by the clouds of dust and gas which fill our galaxy.

This article was provided to Space.com by Starry Night Education, the leader in space science curriculum solutions.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36027216/ns/technology_and_science-space/?GT1=43001

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