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Transit of Venus
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Venus to cross sun in NC sky

Published: 2012-06-05 05:00:00
Updated: 2012-06-05 20:42:33

North Carolina has a chance Tuesday to see part of a once-in-a-lifetime transit of the planet Venus across the face of the sun.

More Info     Transit of Venus

Venus orbits the sun faster than Earth and closer to the sun. It periodically passes in front of the sun based on our perspective here on Earth. But that period is a bit odd due to the orbits of the two planets. Remember there are three dimensions at work there as well.

Think of two hula hoops, one smaller (Venus’s orbit) than the other (Earth’s orbit). Venus moves around its hula-hoop faster than Earth does, catching up with Earth every 19 months (583.92 days to be exact, its synodic period). However, those hula-hoops are tilted slightly (3.5 degrees), making most of those points where Venus catches up and passes Earth either above or below Earth’s orbit.

Take those tilted orbits, varying orbital speeds and you get the weird 8-year, then 105-year, then 8-year, then 121-year waits.

Venus’s motion is not the only factor in how we might be able to view the transit. We are moving here on the Earth, and that movement, coupled with our position on Earth, impacts the shape of Venus’s path across the face of the sun.

You might have seen the diagram showing a straight path across the top of the sun. That’s from the press release put together by experts at NASA’s Solar System Exploration Division at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

No one will probably get that view, however, because it is only possible from the North Pole. When communicating an event that varies by where you are on Earth, a central point must to be chosen. For transits, the North or South poles are used to eliminate the effect of latitude. Similarly, scientific organizations like NASA use Universal Correlated Time (Greenwich Mean Time) for all time-based data.

Generally speaking, the further north you are, the straighter the path will be. Below the equator, Venus will even make a looped path across the sun.

Here in North Carolina, Venus will cross the edge of the sun shortly after 6 p.m. entering at the top on the sun’s face, then travel down and slightly to the right in a graceful loop until the sun sets a little over two hours later, about a third of the way into transit.

In Japan, the entire transit will be visible, with Venus entering from the left and swooping up before diving down to exit on the lower right of the sun’s face. In the Philippines, the path looks like a cursive lower case 'e' that would make any elementary teacher proud.

India’s view is opposite ours, beginning at sunrise with the remaining two-thirds of the event visible that sunset keeps us in North Carolina from seeing. India's view is on the left side of the face of the sun, while our show happens on the right.

Without sufficient protection such as a #14 welders mask, a telescope with a proper solar filter or the very dark "eclipse glasses," you should never look directly at the sun. Sunglasses aren't sufficient, either. Venus won't block enough of the sun to be viewed safely without proper protection. If you dont have any of these things in the back of your closet, you can still be a part of this astronomical event.

Several science museums in the area are hosting free family events starting at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. Each will include talks on the transit, Venus, the sun and how transits are used outside our solar system to discovery planets. Each event also includes safe viewing of the transit with solar telescopes, telescopes modified with solar-safe filters and run by knowledgeable volunteers from area astronomy clubs.

Events are being held at the Morehead Planetarium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh and the Robeson Planetarium in Lumberton.

See the transit of Venus live online on NASA's website.


Tony Rice is a volunteer in the NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador program and software engineer at Cisco Systems. You can follow him on twitter @rtphokie.

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41 Comments


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Feel free to post anything on your mind.

Moderator is at lunch.

has anyone's cornea actually ever been burned through to a crisp for looking at the sun? JAT

It's not like they'd be able to read your comments and reply. :)

I have my welding helmet with a #10 shade handy. With a pair sunglasses, it should be a comfortable viewing. #14 shade to me is to dark. As a welder, I have used my helmet on several occasions to watch eclipses and sunspots and know what is comfortable for my eyes.

has anyone's cornea actually ever been burned through to a crisp for looking at the sun?

Carolina43 - and bring Bruce Willis back with them.

Whatever...somebody needs to go up there and get the Transformers from the dark side of the moon.

Great stuff! Thanks for sharing, Tony.

Go Hokies!!

The new science museum in downtown Raleigh has eclipse glasses for $3.

“Remember the days of having exposed film to view through?” – djofraleigh

And the days of damaged eyes, given exposed film doesn’t really provide adequate protection. And while I LOVE peanuts, I consider a Venus transit to be more exciting than cracking open a shell. Captain Cooked sailed to the Pacific Ocean to observe the 1766 transit.

Hope the skies clear enough to get a glance. I’ve made a solar filter for my 80mm refractor. Used it to observe a Mercury transit a few years back.

I’ve also used Welder’s #14 glass to observe partial solar eclipses.

Its Nibiru. Welcome the Annunaki.

Thank you WRAL for editing the article to include warnings about actually LOOKING at the sun to see this event.

Right, last chance in our lifetime. And those born in the next several dozen years have a very small chance of ever seeing this.

"True enough Saturn, but there won't be another one in our lifetime...." -BigBangTheorist

Correct. It's our last opportunity in our lifetime, but it's not our first, unless you're younger than 8 years old.

It's not once in a lifetime. The last one was in 2004. There are 2 transits 8 years apart every 121.5 and 105.5 years. Treat looking at this just like a solar eclipse. You have to use indirect viewing. #14 Welder's Glass is dark enough, but *very* few welding goggles are that dark. Be sure to verify. saturn5 June 5, 2012 8:15 a.m. Report abuse True enough Saturn, but there won't be another one in our lifetime....

There will be some eye damage out of this hype that should only draw scientists attention, but really, the LAST TIME IN A CENTURY headline is overblown.

Here's something that has more hand's on appeal, and easier on the eye: take a peanut in the shell; tell the kids you are going to show then something that has NEVER been seen before, and will NEVER be seen again. Crack open the shell. Show them the peanut. Eat the peanut. That peanut will never be seen again.

Venus will pass between the earth and sun, whether we look or not, practically invisible and without effect.

That peanut grew in the Carolina sun & soil on rainwater from a pod seed. That's a bigger miracle to behold than a sight the size of speck of pepper on an egg yolk.

Protect your eyes.

PS -- Remember the days of having exposed film to view through?

i bought some welders #14 shade from lowes! .. i think harbor freight has some, but you should call first!

If you cant make it out to the Morehead Planetarium or the Museum of Natural Science this evening, there are several places you can watch online:

http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/webcasts/nasaedge/ Live from Live from the top of Mount Mauna Kea, Hawaii, http://www.astronomerswithoutborders.org/projects/transit-of-venus/live-webcast.html Live from Mount Wilson Observatory in Los Angeles http://www.ccssc.org/transit2012/transit2012Gobi.html Australia, Mongolia and Utah http://skycenter.arizona.edu/news/announcements Arizona http://www.bareket-astro.com/live-astronomical-web-cast/live-free-venus-transit-webcast-6-june-2012.html Israel http://www.sems.und.edu/index.php Alaska http://cas.appstate.edu/streams/2012/05/physics-and-astronomy-astrocam Appalachian State http://www.skywatchersindia.com/swan-tv.html India http://events.slooh.com

@look deeper, I'd also recommend steering clear of "solar glasses" sold locally. The Morehead Planetarium purchased a bunch of the glasses and is planning to hand them out, one per family, and they were purchased from a reputable dealer.

Your vision is too precious to trust to the unknown.

i've seen the saucers....

Thanks, soulcandy, you put a smile on my face. You rock. :)

"I got a six!" "I got a six on the sun stare". Thank you Brian Regan!! Oh and don't forget..."The big yellow one's the sun"!!

I seen it. Yesterday I kept looking.

Here is what you do NOT want to do; go to the local greed store and buy some solar viewing glasses. All your going to get is a cheap greed driven pair of sunglasses made of paper and grade F film. I hope I am wrong but do you really think I am.

But mama, that's where the fun is.

Don't look directly @ the sun for any length of time without proper solar viewing equipment/filtered lenses; WRAL should have put a statement at the beginning of the article;

I hope this rain clears out so we can see it :(

It's not once in a lifetime. The last one was in 2004. There are 2 transits 8 years apart every 121.5 and 105.5 years. Treat looking at this just like a solar eclipse. You have to use indirect viewing. #14 Welder's Glass is dark enough, but *very* few welding goggles are that dark. Be sure to verify.

Mama always told me not to look into the eyes of the sun...and since it doesn't give the time,guess we'll just have to go about our day as usual?

Yeah busyb97, they forgot that important fact to not look directly at the sun and you know there will be people trying to look at it straight on.

WRAL, please update the article to include this information!

Geee...dont make it very clear that you should NOT look at this event without special tools or means of looking at it. They make it sound like you can just watch it like a lunar eclipse or something. A dot across the sun, yeah, that will be easy to see. Please do not look directly at the sun for this. Research how to do it first, or attend an event designed for watching.

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