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New York City's channel 4 news talked about it (like everyone else),
but they got a couple of minor points wrong (probably like everyone else). Not terribly bad, but the less misinformation, the better. One person said that Mars is only 30 million miles from us (close enough, i guess), but then went on to say that it's usually 60 million miles away. Huh?? The only way i can figure 60 million miles is from a least favorable opposition, but a least favorable opposition is hardly "usual." Then the weathercaster, the bearer of bad news for New York astronomers, said that you wouldn't be able to see Mars through the clouds with the naked eye or with binoculars. But a telescope might do it. Really!?! I had no idea! All this time i was staying indoors on overcast nights... It wasn't all bad, of course. They did make what was perhaps the most important point: Mars will be nearly as bright for the next several weeks. Perhaps we might thank New York's bad weather for forcing them to make that statement; it seems to me that a lot of people thought the show would be over if they weren't outside at the moment of closest approach. Clear skies! -- ------------------- Richard Callwood III -------------------- ~ U.S. Virgin Islands ~ USDA zone 11 ~ 18.3N, 64.9W ~ ~ eastern Massachusetts ~ USDA zone 6 (1992-95) ~ --------------- http://cac.uvi.edu/staff/rc3/ --------------- |
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Cousin Ricky wrote:
Then the weathercaster, the bearer of bad news for New York astronomers, said that you wouldn't be able to see Mars through the clouds with the naked eye or with binoculars. But a telescope might do it. Really!?! I had no idea! All this time i was staying indoors on overcast nights... If you had a radio telescope, maybe. Is mars at all "visible" in the radio spectrum (not counting the space probes there)? Of course you'd need a VLA or a Earth planet wide network of radio telescopes to get decent resolution...... |
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Cousin Ricky wrote:
Then the weathercaster, the bearer of bad news for New York astronomers, said that you wouldn't be able to see Mars through the clouds with the naked eye or with binoculars. But a telescope might do it. Really!?! I had no idea! All this time i was staying indoors on overcast nights... If you had a radio telescope, maybe. Is mars at all "visible" in the radio spectrum (not counting the space probes there)? Of course you'd need a VLA or a Earth planet wide network of radio telescopes to get decent resolution...... |
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Mr G on WPIX 11 TV in NYC just said on the 10 oclock news that Mars will be
only 60,000 miles away tonight ! |
#7
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Mr G on WPIX 11 TV in NYC just said on the 10 oclock news that Mars will be
only 60,000 miles away tonight ! |
#8
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In article ,
Esmail Bonakdarian wrote: Cousin Ricky wrote: New York City's channel 4 news talked about it (like everyone else), but they got a couple of minor points wrong (probably like everyone else). Not terribly bad, but the less misinformation, the better. One person said that Mars is only 30 million miles from us (close enough, i guess), but then went on to say that it's usually 60 million miles away. Huh?? The only way i can figure 60 million miles is from a least favorable opposition, but a least favorable opposition is hardly "usual." ABC World News had a nice animation of the Earth and Mars circling around the sun and ending up at a distance of a mere 3.5 million miles. One common error in the Swedish media is to give the distance as 56 million miles instead of million km. Now, a Swedish mile isn't a mere 1.609 km -- instead it's 10 km (exactly). Thus our media sometimes puts Mars at 10 times its actual distance, which is even larger than its real maximum possible distance.... -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://www.stjarnhimlen.se/ http://home.tiscali.se/pausch/ |
#9
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In article ,
Esmail Bonakdarian wrote: Cousin Ricky wrote: New York City's channel 4 news talked about it (like everyone else), but they got a couple of minor points wrong (probably like everyone else). Not terribly bad, but the less misinformation, the better. One person said that Mars is only 30 million miles from us (close enough, i guess), but then went on to say that it's usually 60 million miles away. Huh?? The only way i can figure 60 million miles is from a least favorable opposition, but a least favorable opposition is hardly "usual." ABC World News had a nice animation of the Earth and Mars circling around the sun and ending up at a distance of a mere 3.5 million miles. One common error in the Swedish media is to give the distance as 56 million miles instead of million km. Now, a Swedish mile isn't a mere 1.609 km -- instead it's 10 km (exactly). Thus our media sometimes puts Mars at 10 times its actual distance, which is even larger than its real maximum possible distance.... -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://www.stjarnhimlen.se/ http://home.tiscali.se/pausch/ |
#10
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![]() "Cousin Ricky" wrote in message om... Then the weathercaster, the bearer of bad news for New York astronomers, said that you wouldn't be able to see Mars through the clouds with the naked eye or with binoculars. But a telescope might do it. Really!?! I had no idea! All this time i was staying indoors on overcast nights... I remember looking at Saturn under broken clouds one night for about 5 minutes. At the end of which I thought that the quality of image had deteriorated a bit. Thinking it might be due to using the same eye for all that time, I had a look at the sky and was gobsmacked to see that clouds had rolled in and covered Saturn completely so that it was ionvisible to the naked eye. It was still distinctly visible through the scope even a few minutes later. It taught me 2 things, that you _can_ observe through clouds that the eye/brain is remarkably insensitive to gradual change - I was aware that the quality of the view had worsened, but I was completely unaware that the image brightness had been reduced so much. |
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