Bright object to east

Bright object to east

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Discussion

MXRod

Original Poster:

2,800 posts

154 months

Friday 9th October 2020
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As the title ,
Is there a geostationary satellite to the east which ,when the sky is clear,It's quite bright morning and evening ,and pretty much in the same position.
Don't think it's a planet ,Venus suggested on Google ,but it does not rise or set,

Nemophilist

3,085 posts

188 months

Friday 9th October 2020
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Mars has been visible brightly in the east the past few days

Mouse Rat

1,886 posts

99 months

Friday 9th October 2020
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Mars has been in the east in the late evenings. Venus is now in the east.

hiccy18

2,984 posts

74 months

Friday 9th October 2020
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Sounds like you're seeing Mars at night and Venus in the morning.

MXRod

Original Poster:

2,800 posts

154 months

Friday 9th October 2020
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Cheers, that makes sense

Eric Mc

122,855 posts

272 months

Friday 9th October 2020
quotequote all
Geostationary satellites are too small and too far away to be visible to the naked eye - unless your eyesight is good enough to spot something the size of a bus at a distance of 25,000 miles.

Mars rises in the evening. It rises in the east and is directly overhead by the early hours of the morning. It is very bright at the moment and very obviously red/orange in colour.

Venus also rises in the east in the early hours of the morning. It is even brighter than Mars but white in colour.

MXRod

Original Poster:

2,800 posts

154 months

Friday 9th October 2020
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Geostationary satellites are too small and too far away to be visible to the naked eye - unless your eyesight is good enough to spot something the size of a bus at a distance of 25,000 miles.

Mars rises in the evening. It rises in the east and is directly overhead by the early hours of the morning. It is very bright at the moment and very obviously red/orange in colour.

Venus also rises in the east in the early hours of the morning. It is even brighter than Mars but white in colour.
I would have trouble spotting anything the size of a bus at 2.5 miles let alone 25k biggringetmecoat
As I have not spent time observing the “bright object” morning and evening . What you and others have said makes sense .I am seeing two different planets in the same area, early morning before sunrise , and then late evening whilst dog is out for her “finals”. Binoculars for next look at , assuming the sky is clear !



Edited by MXRod on Friday 9th October 10:48

Gandahar

9,600 posts

135 months

Thursday 15th October 2020
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MXRod said:
Eric Mc said:
Geostationary satellites are too small and too far away to be visible to the naked eye - unless your eyesight is good enough to spot something the size of a bus at a distance of 25,000 miles.

Mars rises in the evening. It rises in the east and is directly overhead by the early hours of the morning. It is very bright at the moment and very obviously red/orange in colour.

Venus also rises in the east in the early hours of the morning. It is even brighter than Mars but white in colour.
I would have trouble spotting anything the size of a bus at 2.5 miles let alone 25k biggringetmecoat
As I have not spent time observing the “bright object” morning and evening . What you and others have said makes sense .I am seeing two different planets in the same area, early morning before sunrise , and then late evening whilst dog is out for her “finals”. Binoculars for next look at , assuming the sky is clear !

Edited by MXRod on Friday 9th October 10:48
These websites can be useful for a quick check

https://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/night/@26390...

you can scroll around and see what is what.

Lot's of other sites do similar, or you can download something like Stellarium for more advanced stuff.




Ash_

5,933 posts

197 months

Friday 16th October 2020
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I downloaded Skymap for my phone, just fire it up and point your phone at the object (screen facing you obvs), the phone display shows a skymap with the major objects identified.

MiseryStreak

2,929 posts

214 months

Saturday 17th October 2020
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Mars is currently in opposition, meaning Earth and Mars are the closest they can get to each other in their orbits, lined up on the same side of the Sun. it’s actually particularly close this time, on 13th October it was only 39 million miles away and won’t be this close again until 2035.

But not nearly as close as it got in 2003, the closest it has been in 60,000 years.