Australian Sky & Telescope

2020 Mars observing guide

THE RED PLANET WILL REACH one of its best recent oppositions on October 14, when it will be just 62.7 million kilometres from your front door — close enough to outshine planetary kingpin Jupiter, and large enough for satisfying telescopic views of the Martian surface.

Mars will actually be about 664,000 kilometres nearer on October 6, when it has its closest approach to Earth. Martian perihelion occurred on August 3, and ever since then the planet has been slowly moving away from the Sun, while at the same time Earth has been catching up in its orbit. The result is the October 6 ‘sweet spot’ — a compromise between Mars’ increasing solar distance and proximity to Earth.

Mars circles the Sun in a slightly elliptical orbit, oppositions are when Mars shines exceptionally bright and presents a disk near its maximum size. Fortunately for observers at mid-southern latitudes, the timing of these favourable oppositions often coincides with Mars sinking to the ‘bottom’ of the ecliptic, where it’s positioned high in the sky. Fine seeing at high altitudes avoids the ‘muddying’ effect that observing at low altitudes gives, making it easy to discern surface details, especially on nights of nearly perfect steady seeing.

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