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=== Assistant: Short answer: yes, generally more visible from Mars — but with a few caveats. === Short answer: yes, generally more visible from Mars — but with a few caveats. Why it’s better on Mars: * Much thinner atmosphere → less scattering and glow. The sky is darker, so the Milky Way pops more. * No light pollution (unless Elon finally ruins that too). * No Moon like ours. Phobos and Deimos are tiny and don’t wash out the sky. Why it’s not always perfect: * Martian dust can be a vibe killer. During dust storms (local or global), visibility drops hard. * The sky isn’t pitch black like from orbit; there’s still some atmospheric scattering, just way less than Earth. Important clarification: Mars isn’t in some dramatically different spot in the galaxy. It’s only ~1.5 AU farther from the Sun than Earth, which is nothing on galactic scales. So the Milky Way’s structure looks the same — just higher contrast. Net take: From a clear, dust-free Martian night → Milky Way looks crisper and more dramatic than from most places on Earth, even compared to good dark-sky sites. Astronomy W for Mars. Living there still an L.
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