Mars captivates the southern sky until the end of July



[ad_1]

  Mars captivates the southern sky until the end of July

Weather Resources

Madison may have missed the Friday's best-selling show when North America's longest blood moon eclipse this century.

However, do not despair observers of the southern skies of Wisconsin! Mars has not finished dazzling us this month.

Check out this photo of our Skycam Skywater on Friday night. You can see Mars and the moon side by side!

The images do not do justice to this view, so the best thing to do is to see it yourself in the southern sky

And the news keeps coming back 39: improve: Mars will be even brighter in the sky until early August! Even if the red planet's opposition was Friday, it will still be slightly closer to Earth in the next few days. It will be so bright that Mars will eclipse Jupiter, which is quite the heavenly feat.

The Fourth Planet will be the brightest on July 31, when it will pbad the closest to Earth in 15 years.

If you miss your chance to see Mars for the next few days, or if those pesky nighttime clouds bother you, do not worry not! Mars will still be visible (albeit quite low in the southern sky) until the end of August.

Send your best photos of the red planet to [email protected]

[ad_2]
Source link