You have received a hoax e-mail. They circulate every summer. Loads of people must get them because Yahoo! Answers gets loads of questions on this subject.
Once upon a time a long time ago (about 60,000 BC) there was a close approach of Mars to Earth of about 34.5 million miles..
Mars did not come that close to Earth again until 27th August 2003. That was worth remarking upon as a memorable occasion and received publicity. These occasions are called perihelic oppositions.
Mars (magnitude -2.9) was marginally brighter than Jupiter (magnitude -2.8) on that date in 2003. However Venus which is both larger than Mars and nearer than Mars is (as you might expect) always brighter than Mars and varies between magnitude -3.8 and - 4.6.
So the statement in the e-mail that Mars is about to become the brightest planet in the night sky is untrue.
The hoaxers do not know much about astronomy. They just sensationalise and distort the limited facts they have managed to pick up without properly understanding them or their implications.
As Venus has never been seen as large as the Moon and Venus is always brighter than Mars, it follows that Mars will not be seen to be as large as the Moon not on 27th August nor at any other time.
The naive belief that it "could be" that large this time just reveals the hoaxers' lack of understanding of how the Sun's gravity keeps the planets in stable orbits, which means the extent to which they vary in their positions is calculable and predictable.
Humanity has been studying and predicting the planets and their orbits for 4,000 years and writing their findings up in almanacs and suddenly someone comes along and declares "an unexpected dramatic change in a stable orbit is about to occur", wlthout explaining why that should be so. And expects to be believed!?
So the hoaxers do not understand that planetary orbits have been observed and carefully calculated and predicted for 4,000 years.
The hoaxers however seem to be suggesting that planets behave unpredictably and chaotically without any pattern or sense to that behaviour, and further, that they the hoaxers, like the Delphic Oracle of old, have unique divination powers and are passing on their knowledge, to which they alone are privy, to lucky old you.
Whereas all they are in fact passing on is misinformation based on their ignorance.
Mars, even at its nearest in 2003, was 140 times as far away as the Moon, and it is only twice its size (Equatorial radius of Mars = 3,402.5 km. Equatorial radius of the Moon = 1,738.14 km.).
So how could an object that is twice the size of the Moon but at least 140 times as far away (more like 220 times as far away in December 2007 when it will be 55 million miles away) ever look as big as the Moon? Does a tomato 140 yards away look as big as a cherry held at arm's length?
The only way Mars could ever appear as large as the Moon is if it were to get as close as half a million miles away,
If it did do that, it would be a disaster, causing huge tidal waves on Earth and tsunamai such as we have not seen the like of before. It would not be a thing to gawp at, and say "Oh wow! Awesome!" and tell all your friends to look out for it at 12.30 am !
But of course it won't do that (come within half a million miles of Earth) as Mars has a stable orbit.
The hoaxers have sent out the same e-mail every summer as regards 27 August 2004, 27 August 2005, 27 August 2006 and now 27 August 2007. Again revealing their ignorance of how the Solar System works. Mars has a year that equals 1.88 Earth years and as a result only comes close to us once every 26 months: on 27th August 2003, and then not again until 30th October 2005 and then not again until 18th December 2007.
The idea of it having a close approach on the same date every year is nonsense therefore, it is not like a wedding anniversary or a birthday or Mothers' Day, As the hoaxers seem to believe,
If anyone had have craned their necks and looked at the skies at 12.30 am on 27 August 2004 or 27th August 2006, all they would have got for their efforts was a stiff neck. As Mars was on the far side of the Sun on those two occasions and nowhere to be seen, as it was hidden behind the Sun's glare.
That is how much the hoaxers know about astronomy. That is how accurate and worthless their predictions are. Nobody should be taken in by their "knowledge" and nobody should copy and spread their e-mail to others so as "to pass on the exciting news" they have just received.
Snopes.com (see link) have a useful article on the hoax.
2007-07-30 06:30:52
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It's a misunderstanding of an article describing an event in 2003. Mars made its closest approach in recorded history in that year, and the article described how the planet, *when viewed with at least 75x magnification through a telescope* would appear as large as the Moon does to the unaided eye. Somewhere along the line the bit about magnification got lost, and the story has circulated every year since 2003. For the record, Mars made its close approach in January this year, and is now moving away from Earth. It never appears as more than a very bright red star to the unaided eye.
2016-05-17 22:45:42
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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No. Mars will never be close enough to earth to appear as large as our moon. This started back in August of 2003 when Mars was close to earth and it was not going to get any closer for another 65 million years or it had not been as close in the last 65 million years.
2007-07-30 06:42:39
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answer #3
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answered by Barbara H 2
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No. Mars never gets close enough to do that. Since Mars is only about twice as large as the moon, it would have to be no more than half a million miles away; its closest approach to earth is about 35 million miles.
2007-07-30 06:35:56
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No. Mars, in its current orbit, will never be close enough to Earth to appear as large as the Moon. Nowhere even close. It's a common, and unfortunately very wrong, urban myth.
2007-07-30 06:09:40
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answer #5
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answered by Ryan H 6
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No.
I wouldn't go so far as to label the email on the subject a hoax; rather, it's one forwarded by well-meaning but otherwise uninformed people.
Even in August 2003 (which was indeed the closest Mars had been to Earth in a long time), you needed a fairly hefty telescope to see anything other than a little orange dot. Mars just isn't very big.
2007-07-30 07:25:57
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answer #6
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answered by laurahal42 6
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If mars ever appered the size of the moon it would be alramly close, there would be a serious problem. Mars will never get that close to us where it will look that big.
2007-07-30 15:13:26
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answer #7
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answered by Mr. Smith 5
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No it will not...It seems that every August or so, this question appears...Please see the following link for a detailed explanation is why it will NOT appear as large as our moon...
http://www.snopes.com/science/mars.asp
2007-07-30 06:17:11
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answer #8
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answered by BAM55 4
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No ... this crap comes up every summer. It's from a hokey ad for a cheap telescope that said if you used a certain eyepiece a few years ago, it would look the same size of the moon
2007-07-30 06:09:18
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answer #9
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answered by Gene 7
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large as ur moon, don't you think that's a bit crazy...
2007-08-02 07:59:51
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answer #10
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answered by Manisha 2
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