jump to navigation

Will Mars be as big as the Moon? August 9, 2007

Posted by astroed in Astronomy, Education, ICT, Skepticism.
trackback



This question has become an occupational hazard for those of us working in astronomy education and public outreach. Each year in July and early August we receive emails from the public – some tentative, others skeptical, some just wanting to know. There are variations on the question but all ask whether Mars really will appear as big/large/bright/close as the Moon in the sky in late August.

How did this question arise?

The Moon and Mars

It dates back to the opposition of Mars in August 2003. An opposition occurs when a planet outside the orbit of Earth (that is Mars and beyond) is opposite the Sun in the sky. From Earth the planet therefore is visible all night, reaching maximum elevation at midnight. More importantly for observers the planet is at its closest to Earth so also appears at its brightest. Due to the elliptical orbit of planets, some oppositions bring them closer to Earth than others. This is particularly the case with Mars as its orbit is lightly more elliptical than the other planets.

The email doing the rounds mentions August 27 but omits the year so it is easily recycled year after year. Rather than dismissing the email out of hand though, use it as a timely, useful exercise in critical thinking and investigation in the classroom. Don’t answer the student questions, get them to think how they can go about finding out if it is true, where Mars will be in the sky, how far away it will be and how large it will appear. This is a great Problem-Based-Learning exercise. It draws on several skills and blends reading with simulations, some ratios and mathematics and modelling.

Several sites have background on the hoax email and the misconceptions:

Free programs such as the open-source Stellarium are also a great way to let students explore what the sky will look like in late August.

Exploring this email could easily take up one or more lesson but will be time well spent in developing students’ questioning and thinking skills. Let me know if you try it.

Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

Comments»

no comments yet - be the first?


*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image