海角大神

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Sunday night, be dazzled by a bigger, brighter Mars

Mars is reaching its closest point to Earth in a over a decade, offering spectacular nighttime views.聽

By Lonnie Shekhtman, Staff

This weekend brings a spectacular cosmic show for stargazers, who will be able to see Mars, with or without a telescope, as it makes its way to its closest distance from Earth in more than a decade.

Early Sunday morning, Mars, the next planet out from the sun after Earth, reached 鈥渙pposition鈥 with Earth, which means it aligned in a straight line with our planet and the sun on its path in a wide, elliptical orbit about the sun. This weekend, and over the next few weeks, is the best time to see Mars, which will appear bigger and brighter in the night sky.

During opposition, Mars聽and the sun flank Earth on opposite sides, so the Red Planet聽will appear to Earthlings to rise in the East just as the sun sets in the West, making the sun-facing side of the orange-reddish planet luminous all night long.

There will be a rare chance on May 30 at 6 p.m. EDT (22:00 GMT) to view the planet at its closest point to Earth since November 2005, when it will be 46.7 million miles away.

Besides offering rare close-up views of Mars, opposition events are also a boost for space agencies such as NASA, which time the launch of聽rovers and orbiters to Mars聽around oppositions, as National Geographic points out, as the proximity of the planets saves money on fuel and time on travel.

Given its further distance from the sun and the different forces of gravity influencing it, Mars orbits the sun much more slowly and on a different plane than does Earth. For this reason it reaches opposition only once every 26 months, when it happens to briefly sync up with Earth鈥檚 tighter orbit around the sun.

The shape of Mars鈥檚 path around the sun is also more elliptical than Earth鈥檚 鈥 and actually elongating over the centuries 鈥 so the distance between the two planets changes. This means that some oppositions bring the worlds closer together than others.

As NASA points out, this is because an opposition can happen anywhere along Mars's orbit. When it happens while the Red Planet is closest to the sun, which is called "perihelic opposition," Mars is especially close to Earth.

The last close encounter of this type was in August 2003, when Mars was 35 million miles from Earth, the closest the two planets had been in almost 60,000 years. Unfortunately for today鈥檚 stargazers, this won鈥檛 happen again until 2287.

Here is advice from Space.com on where in the sky to look for Mars during this month鈥檚 opposition: