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Analysis: See Mars in the sky the day Nasa’s Perseverance rover lands

17 February 2021

PhD Student Osnat Katz (UCL Science & Technology Studies) explains that Mars is one of the easiest planets to see from Earth and is visible for almost the whole year, even without special equipment.

Osnat Katz

Last year was the year of Mars launches, and this one will be the year of Mars landings. The Hope Mars mission, launched by the United Arab Emirates, entered its orbit around Mars on February 9, while China’s Tianwen-1 rover, now orbiting the planet, will land in May. Meanwhile, Nasa’s Perseverance rover will land on the red planet come February 18.

Mars is one of the easiest planets to see in the night sky, blazing bright orange and visible for almost the whole year. It’s been high up in the sky since the second half of last year, and you don’t need any special equipment to see it.

This means there are some great opportunities to see the planet travelling across the night skies, including just as the Perseverance rover is touching down. The day the rover lands, there will be a close approach of the moon and Mars – meaning they will appear next to each other in the night sky.

It’s not every day you get to see a close approach while a rover makes its landing. Wrap up warm and look for the Moon and Mars together as, 200 million km (124 million miles) away, Perseverance lands.

Close approach

Here on Earth, we see close approaches because of what astronomers call the apparent motion of our Moon and the planets in the sky. Because the Earth and the other planets take different times to go around our Sun, and because the moon takes time to go around Earth, sometimes planets and our Moon look close to each other in the sky.

An “appulse” or “close approach” is when two objects look closest to each other, even if they’re not physically close. It doesn’t have physical consequences, but it does look impressive, and it’s a great chance to take some space and do some planet watching.

On February 18, Mars rises just after sunset, at 17:40 (GMT), and joins a waxing crescent moon. Wherever you are in the world, look south for the Moon, and the little orange-red dot you see near it will be Mars.

It’ll be a treat just getting out and seeing the close approach with the naked eye, but if you have binoculars you’ll also be able to get up closer and more personal with the red planet, and especially with the moon.

Although Mars is too small and far away for binoculars to do much more than make the planet look like a slightly bigger orange red dot, even a small pair of binoculars can pick out the Moon’s craters in sharp, striking detail. Unfortunately, you won’t be able to catch Mars and the Moon together through a telescope – they’re still a bit too far away from each other for that.

It’s worth wrapping up warm against the cold February air while Mars and the Moon move further south and west over the course of the night. Around 18:40 you’ll be able to look up and to the left of Mars to see a set of fuzzy, twinkling pinpricks. These twinkly pinpricks are the Pleiades or the Seven Sisters, a group of hot blue stars more than 400 light years away.

There are far more than seven of them – you’ll be able to see anywhere between six and nine with the naked eye, or through binoculars or a telescope, and today we know there are over 1,000. You can track the Moon, Mars and the Pleiades across the sky until they set in the west just after 13:00.

Planets move across the sky. This is how they got to be called planets because the ancient Greeks called them planetai or “wanderers”. Right now, Mars is moving steadily to the west and you can usually recognise it by its distinctive colour, as well as its distinct lack of twinkling - stars twinkle, while planets don’t. As long as it’s a clear night, you can generally spot it.

Mars had its closest approach to Earth back in October last year, which means right now it’s getting further away from us. As it moves west, it’ll also be moving past the Pleiades into the constellation of Taurus, the bull. By April Mars will be visible straight above Aldebaran - the brightest star in the constellation Taurus. By May, Mars moves into the constellation of Gemini but is unfortunately low in the sky.

You can see Mars and Venus together in early July, low on the western horizon. But by August, Mars will be difficult – if not impossible – to spot. From there it sets too early for us to see in our skies – but don’t worry, it’ll be back and at a close approach to Earth by 2022.

This article originally appeared in The Conversation on 16 February 2021.

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