During the last star party at The Virginia Living Museum, I laid eyes on Mars for the first time this year. It rose above the horizon to become the fitting end to the night’s event. Venus started the activities and Mars finished it. Bright and unmistakably red, we all focused our telescopes on the red planet and made the same comment, “It looks cloudy.” Currently Mars is experiencing a planet wide dust storm. The Opportunity rover is hopefully going to survive to continue its record breaking exploration of Mars.
Barely visible on the north pole is the ice cap. The southern ice cap is hidden from my view here. At the time the planet was low in the sky, so seeing wasn’t great. This is the best of the photos I captured that night.
ISO too high. Because it’s so birght, lowering the ISO and taking longer video should improve the picuture quality and detail. This is the initial issue I can see. Leave me a message with your thoughts on how I can improve.
Mars is in opposition on July 27, 2018. Based on the weather reports I will be under cloudy skies. If you’re under clear skies, think about me. Hopefully the weather man is wrong, very wrong.
Any planet in opposition is simply when the Earth is directly between the planet and the Sun. Mars is also at it’s closest point to Earth on July 31, 2018. That’s about 36 million miles between planets. Both of these events means it will be putting on a great show now through August 2018. It will be bright and dominate the sky. Get your binoculars, telescopes and cameras ready. Take lots of pictures, make lots of memories and do it with family and friends. Clear skies!
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