Celebrate Mars rover Curiosity landing by seeing Mars tonight.
TONIGHT FORAUGUST 6, 2012
Courtesy U.S. Naval Observatory
All congratulations to NASA’s Mars Curiosity rover today, shown in an artist’s concept on Mars’ surface at the top of this post. This SUV-sized rover – the largest NASA has placed on Mars – successfully accomplished its daring landing on the Red Planet at 10:31 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time on August 5 (5:31 UTC on August 6, 2012). Meanwhile, tonight, as darkness falls, youcan easily find Mars in the night sky.
Look for Mars in a triangle with two other objects – the planet Saturn and star Spica. They will pop out fairly low in the southwest sky after sunset. At more southerly latitudes, look for the threesome to appear in a more westerly direction. All across the globe, however, the close-knit trio of lights should be pretty conspicuous at nightfall.
It’ll be fun to watch Mars with with respect to Saturn and Spica in the coming week. In a little more than a week from now, the red planet Mars will pass right in between the ringed planet Saturn and Spica, which, by the way, is the brightest star in the constellation Virgo the Maiden. And in just a few days, all three luminaries will be close enough to fit – or nearly fit – within a single binocular field. On August 20 and August 21, the young crescent moon will return to this part of the sky, joining these planets and this star.
Mars is nearly on the far side of the sun from Earth now, over 150 million miles away. That means it takes the signal from NASA’s new Mars rover Curiosity 13.8 minutes to reach Earth.
By the way, as you gaze at this trio of objects in the night sky, you might remember that Mars is closer than Saturn (83 light-minutes away) or Spica (260 light-years away.
As you peer at Mars in the night sky, NASA’s Curiosity rover – the centerpiece of the Mars Science Laboratory mission – is checking out its systems, after an unprecedented landing on Mars. This rover is larger than previous rovers. It is a 1-ton robot – about the mass of an SUV – and landing it on Mars without kicking up dust (which could harm its delicate instruments) was a serious engineering challenge. The excellent video below shows how the risky maneuver kept rover team members in suspense for 7 fateful minutes. Don’t miss this video!
Bottom line: Find Mars in the night sky tonight – August 6, 2012 – day of the historic landing of the NASA’s new Mars Curiosity rover on the Red Planet’s surface. The planet makes a triangle with two other night sky objects. One is another planet, Saturn. The other is the star Spica. You’ll find them all in the southwest to west after sunset.
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