It Depends, Where U Live. Because at various timezones, Hemispheres. u see different sky, light,etc.
If I see Mars at midnight in India, That means Australia cannot see it, because of different hemisphers.
The visibility of Mars is quite variable as it and the Earth go through their cycles. The orbit of Mars is the next beyond the Earth's, so when both planets are on the same side of the Sun, Mars is near, brighter, and bigger in a telescope. When an outer planet like Mars is lined up with the Sun and the Earth, beyond the Earth, it is said to be at opposition. The planet is then closest, and high in the midnight sky. After the Earth passes Mars in its orbit, Mars gets much further away, and is smaller and dimmer.
2006-07-30 21:57:23
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answer #1
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answered by Tanul M 2
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Mars is barely visible now in evening twilight. It will soon be passing behind the Sun and not be visible for a while. Mars will rapidly brighten in the fall of 2007 as it moves towards its opposition (opposite the Sun from Earth, and therefore closest to Earth) in December 2007.
Mars oppositions occur about every 26 months. Mars will be fairly distant in its next few oppositions.
2006-07-30 21:59:10
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answer #2
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answered by injanier 7
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It was visible last October and iIobserved it through my telescope. It's a pretty boring planet with hard to see features. I could barely see were the polar ice caps. It wasn't worth my time. Saturn is a much nicer planet to observe. It looks beautiful through a telescope and you can see the rings. Mars is featureless dot.
2006-07-30 21:40:16
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answer #3
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answered by A. 1
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um, it always has been, look up at the sky, there's a red dot, thats "MARS", and is'nt it odd that "Mars" the God of war, is the closest it has been to the Earth, in a long time ?
2006-07-30 21:40:32
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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About March to May, I guess
2006-07-30 21:39:28
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answer #5
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answered by alvin 2
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when it starts to scatter light like sun. :)
2006-07-30 21:39:24
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answer #6
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answered by Frollo 2
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