Jerry Bonnell (UMCP) Section 2: Select the sky events to include in the calendar (moon phases, eclipses, planet positions, meteor showers, etc). To observers on the ground, the distance between the two planets will be no more than the width of a raised finger, with Mars appearing just to the lower right of the massive gas giant. March 7 - Full moon. Moreover, at the bottom of the page, you will be able to see an explanation about the video, picture. Being so much smaller, Mars reflects far less sunlight. It will appear full from Sunday night through Wednesday morning. Ford 20112023. Unlike a total solar eclipse in which ideal viewing is limited to a roughly 100-mile-wide path of totality as the shadow of Earths Moon sweeps across the land relative to the position of the Sun a lunar eclipse has no such limits. Best viewing happens after 3 AM local time, so get up early. We cant be certain what well see. New meteor shower? document.getElementById("dstyes").checked = true; // dstButton.setAttribute("checked","checked"); . Email: Robert.M.Candey@nasa.gov, Heliospheric Physics Laboratory Code 672 The APOD, also known as Astronomy Picture of the Day Calendar is a website provided by NASA and Michigan Technological University and was launched in 1995. You can see an image of the universe on that specific day, as well as some information about the image, when you open the app. new Array("UTC-2:00","Atlantic",""), The Sun is so far away that it takes light about 8 minutes and 20 seconds for it to get to us - and light is the fastest thing in the universe. And that excitement has sparked a lot of information about the tau Herculids. Preston Dyches, Christopher Harris, and Lisa Poje are the science communicators and space enthusiasts who produce this monthly video series for NASA at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Enter the month and date below to find out! The giant planet appears lower in the sky each night through the month, making its exit as an evening object. Then share the results with your friends on social media using #Hubble30. The Next Full Moon is the Harvest Moon, the Fruit Moon, the Barley Moon, and the Corn Moon. The Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian advances humanitys knowledge of the Universe by uncovering the nature of distant cosmic phenomena. document.write("