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Just 34.6 million miles of space will separate the two planets on August 27. If that doesn't sound close, Mars was five times as distant just six months ago.
Already, Mars has begun to loom large in the late evening sky, its rusty twinkle apparent in the southeast. For the next several weeks the fourth rock from the sun should shine brighter than any other nighttime celestial body -- save the moon and Venus.
"Mars you can't miss, it's bright and red," said Myles Standish, an astronomer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Aldo Vitagliano, of the University of Naples in Italy, calculated that Mars hasn't had as close a brush with Earth since September 12, 57617 B.C., when Neanderthals ruled but modern man had begun to make inroads.
J. Kelly Beatty, executive editor of Sky & Telescope, said he plans to be gazing skyward to bathe in the "Marslight" during the closest approach -- 5:51 a.m. EDT on August 27.
With binoculars, or better yet a telescope, observers can start to pick out details on the planet's surface. The view from even a modest telescope should reveal the planet's southern ice cap, Beatty said.
Next week, astronomers will send radio waves from antennas on Earth that will bounce off Mars to study the terrain where one of the two NASA rovers is targeted to land in January. The close proximity will improve the resolution of the radar images, said Albert Haldemann, deputy project scientist for the rover mission.
Planetariums around the world plan Mars-gazing parties beginning the evening of August 26, and the Hubble Space Telescope is expected to take a close-approach portrait of Mars
Mars Veers Close to Earth