Mercury,
May/June 1997 Table of Contents
James
C. White II
Middle Tennessee State University
Mars,
long planet of our nightmares and late planet of our future, goose-steps
through our evening skies. Let's meddle in its affairs.
It
was a cool night in 1894, and American businessman-turned- astronomer
Percival Lowell sat back in his observing chair and relaxed. For
the past hour he had been hard at work at his telescope on yet another
sketch of the planet Mars, and this one, he told himself, was the
best. Why? Because the canals were so distinct.
Seventeen
years before, the Red Planet had come unusually close to Earth,
giving astronomers an excellent view. The American astronomer Asaph
Hall discovered its two tiny moons, Phobos and Deimos, at that time.
But it was Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli who caught the
attention of the world in 1877. Schiaparelli said he could make
out a network of lines on the martian surface: canali, he called
them, meaning "channels" or "groves." English speakers thought he
meant canals--for people in the 19th century, a mass engineering
feat if ever there were one. The little green man was born.
At
the time, Lowell was a well-known Boston businessman with similarly
well-known siblings--poet Amy Lowell and Harvard University president
Abbott Lawrence Lowell. He became consumed with learning more about
Mars and its intelligent canal-building beings. He purchased land
for an observatory in the high foothills of Flagstaff, Ariz., gave
up his successful business, and headed west. Over the years, Lowell
observed and sketched the Red Planet and its canals [see "Seeing
Is Believing," p. 24]. And when Mars wasn't visible, he observed
Venus and the moons of Jupiter, which he found--what a coincidence!--had
canals, too.
Besides
being patient, energetic, and deep-pocketed, Lowell was a good writer
and public speaker. He got out his message that life existed on
Mars. He wasn't talking microbes, either. These Martians were far
more advanced than we. Yet they still weren't able to arrest the
death of their planet, a sickly 10th the mass of Earth and half
again as far from the Sun. Their lakes and seas were drying up,
their suburban swimming pools becoming ever more expensive to fill.
So, the story went, they dug canals to carry water from the polar
ice caps to the arid equatorial regions.
There
was only one problem: Most other astronomers just couldn't see the
canals, and not for want of trying. "To save my soul I can't believe
in the canals as Schiaparelli draws them," said American astronomer
Edward Emerson Barnard in 1894. By the early 1900s, new, bigger
telescopes confirmed that no canals existed. Lowell and his colleagues,
in their attempt to study fuzzy views of Mars, had seen structure
where there was none [see Echoes of the Past, September/October
1995, p. 35]. It is a case study in how even the most dedicated
observers can be misled.
Good
or bad, Lowell's work heightened the public's interest in worlds
other than our own, so NASA has much to thank him for. And judging
from what Martians do to Earth in science fiction, maybe we're better
off that Lowell, now entombed in an observatory-shaped mausoleum
beside his old observatory, was wrong.
Observing
Guidelines
Mars
demands our attention during May and June, especially with NASA's
Pathfinder spacecraft set to land on Mars in July [see "The Soil of
Mars," September/October 1994, p. 10]. Marching among the dim, outskirt
stars of Leo, the Red Planet in early evening will be high in the
northern sky for you in the Southern Hemisphere and high in the southern
sky for us in the north [see SkyChart, p. C-1]. You can't miss it;
it's one of the brightest objects in the sky.
Fetch
your trusty telescope, sharpen your colored pencils, and brew a
pot of tea. The secret to learning about Mars is to perform careful,
ongoing observations. Over the next two months, plan on spending
at least one night every week or two with Earth's belligerent little
brother. Mars's size in your telescope will not be large, but thankfully
it is high in the sky in early evening for all observers.
Summer
is advancing in Mars's northern hemisphere, the side that's tipped
toward us and the Sun. You can break out the camera for a photographic
record, but I think drawings are better. See whether you can identify
and draw changes in the northern polar ice cap. Along with the times
and dates of your drawings, record your impressions.
Finally,
to bring reality to those drawings, attempt to identify the features
you've drawn. You can obtain a Mars map at your local bookstore
or from the Association
of Lunar and Planetary Observers. In addition, refer to Sky
& Telescope magazine's Mars observing guide in the January 1997
issue.
What
to Do With the Observations
Incorporate
your observations into a document with the following information:
name of the project (such as, "Observing the Martians"), your name
or the name of your group, details of the observing location, mailing
address, telephone number, and email address, if available. We welcome
reports from observers of all ages in all countries. In your report,
please provide accurate time and date information and details of your
observations. We want to know where you were for the observations,
when you were there, what the weather and skies were like, and, of
course, written commentary on your work. This helps us as we select
the Guest Observer, and it helps readers to understand what you studied.
Please
submit your completed report by July 31, 1997, by regular mail to
Jay White, Attn: Guest Observers, Department of Physics and Astronomy,
Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, Tenn. 37132. The
selection committee will evaluate the reports and choose the Guest
Observer for a future issue.
JAMES
C. WHITE II is a professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy
at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro. He confesses
to enjoying the scenes of colonial Mars in the film Total Recall.
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