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Don't miss June's rare transit of Venus

Venus will cross the Sun’s face June 5/6 for the last time in 105 years.

By Richard Talcott Published: May 25, 2012
Venus-transit_Whitney
Venus' small black disk will transit the Sun on June 5/6, offering most earthbound observers a view similar to this one from 2004.
Photo by George Whitney

On the afternoon of June 5, people across North America will have a chance to see Venus pass in front of the Sun for the second and final time this century. Our sister planet previously crossed the solar disk eight years ago, in June 2004, but it won’t do so again until December 2117.

Although such transits are rare, more than three-quarters of the world’s population will have an opportunity to see at least part of this year’s event. Observers with clear skies can witness its entire duration from eastern Asia, eastern Australia, and the western Pacific. For those in North and Central America and northwestern South America, the transit’s early stages will be on display before the Sun sets June 5. Inhabitants of central and western Asia, western Australia, eastern Africa, and most of Europe will see the transit’s closing stages after sunrise June 6.

Before you look at the Sun during the transit (or at any other time, for that matter), make sure to protect your eyes. Even without optical aid, sunlight can burn your retina in seconds; looking through binoculars or a telescope can blind you almost instantly. For a naked-eye view, use a #12 or #14 welder’s glass or “eclipse glasses” specifically designed for viewing the Sun. Both block dangerous ultraviolet and infrared radiation as well as visible light.

Venus-transit_map
The vast majority of Earth's population can view at least some of the June 5/6 Venus transit. Only people in western Africa and eastern South America miss the event entirely. Astronomy: Roen Kelly

Venus spans about 3 percent of the Sun’s apparent diameter, so the planet will appear as an obvious but small black spot to naked eyes. To see the transit close-up, you have to observe through binoculars or a telescope. For a direct view, use an approved solar filter that fits snugly over the front end of your instrument. (With binoculars, either place a filter over both front lenses or keep one of the lens caps on.) In addition, most planetariums and science centers will be open during the transit to provide safe views of the event.

From most of North America, the transit begins in the afternoon and runs through sunset. This means you need to find an observing spot with a clear view to the west and a flat, unobstructed horizon toward the west-northwest where the Sun will set. People in the Eastern Hemisphere viewing the transit at sunrise will want a location with a clear sight line to the east-northeast.

Venus-transit_illustration
Venus' tiny disk will lie closest to the Sun's center at about 1h30m UT June 6 (9:30 p.m. EDT June 5). Astronomy: Roen Kelly

Venus’ disk first touches the Sun’s edge, or limb, at 6:10 p.m. EDT June 5 (subtract one hour for CDT, two hours for MDT, and three hours for PDT). Some 18 minutes after this “first contact,” at 6:28 p.m. EDT, Venus’ trailing limb moves inside the solar disk. Venus will trek across the northern half of the Sun for the next six hours. The planet passes closest to our star’s center at 9:30 p.m. EDT. From the contiguous United States, the Sun will set before Venus completes its journey.

These times represent what a hypothetical observer at Earth’s center would see. Because Venus’ position relative to the Sun shifts with location, actual times on Earth’s surface can differ by up to seven minutes. As a rule of thumb, local times in North America will be a bit earlier and those in Europe a little later.

Few people alive today will live to see another Venus transit — the next one arrives December 10/11, 2117. So take advantage of this opportunity to view one of the rarest celestial events.

Local times of the transit across the globe

 City

First
contact 

 Second
contact

 Greatest
transit

 Third
contact

 Fourth
contact

 New York City  6:04 p.m.  6:21 p.m.

 —

 —

 —

 Miami, Florida  6:05 p.m.  6:22 p.m. 

 —

 —

 —

 Chicago, Illinois  5:04 p.m.  5:22 p.m.  8:26 p.m.

 —

 —

 Dallas, Texas  5:05 p.m.  5:22 p.m.  8:26 p.m.

 —

 —

 Denver, Colorado  4:05 p.m.  4:23 p.m.  7:26 p.m.

 — 

 —

 Seattle, Washington  3:06 p.m.  3:24 p.m.  6:26 p.m.

 —

 —

 Los Angeles, California  3:06 p.m.  3:24 p.m.  6:26 p.m.

 —

 —

 Honolulu, Hawaii  12:10 p.m.  12:28 p.m.  3:26 p.m.  6:27 p.m.  6:45 p.m.
 Tokyo, Japan  7:11 a.m.  7:29 a.m.  10:30 a.m.  1:30 p.m.  1:48 p.m.
 Beijing, China  6:10 a.m.  6:28 a.m.  9:31 a.m.  12:32 p.m.  12:49 p.m.
 Sydney, Australia  8:16 a.m.  8:34 a.m.  11:30 a.m.  2:26 p.m.  2:44 p.m.
 London, England

 —

 —

 —

 5:37 a.m.  5:55 a.m.
 Paris, Frace

 —

 —

 —

 6:38 a.m.  6:55 a.m.
 Rome, Italy

 —

 —

 —

 6:38 a.m.  6:56 a.m.
 Berlin, Germany

 —

 — 

 —

 6:37 a.m.  6:55 a.m.
 Moscow, Russia

 —

 —

 5:31 a.m.  8:37 a.m.  8:54 a.m.

First contact marks the instant when Venus’ disk first touches the Sun’s disk; second contact is when Venus first appears totally within the Sun’s disk; greatest transit occurs when Venus appears closest to the Sun’s center; third contact represents when the leading edge of Venus touches the Sun’s limb; fourth contact signifies the moment when Venus finally exits the Sun’s disk.
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5 stars
BRIAN SWARTZ from MARYLAND said:
Came home at 6:15 to cloudy skies but one hour later cleared completly to watch til 8:00 when the sun went behind a row of trees. I watched with neighbors thru my celestron 8" with solar filter and recorded with orion eyepiece camera. Beautiful!!
DANIEL RIVERA from TEXAS said:
My welding helmet is ready to go! 5 o'clock central!
JAMES DANNER said:
I took the day off from work so that my daughter and I could watch this together. Pin Hole projector - check. Sun Funnel for telescope - check. Sun viewer glasses - check. Weather forecast tomorrow for Okinawa....scattered T-storms... Back up plan to watch transit, via NASA website (just in case) - check!
5 stars
JOHN SACCO SR from IOWA said:
sometimes astronomy in Iowa can be disappointing, however this year I was able to fly to Reno, and photograph the eclipse and tommorrow I will see Venus transit the Sun.
VIRGINIA KRAMER from ALABAMA said:
I will differntly be watching tomorrow, here in Fairhope , AL I do have 2 telescopes, a 90 mm refractor and a Celestron 8 " both with sun filters. Hope to see a good view, weather permittiing
STEWART APGAR IV from TEXAS said:
I have #14 welding glass and want to use my binoculars too see it. Can I cover the lenses with the glass and use it as a filter?
CELSO MONTALVO said:
I can get only #12 welder glass. Is it safe to see the transit?
3 stars
SOUMITRA BHIDE said:
i can't wait for that day.
ROBERT DEROUIN from RHODE ISLAND said:
I'll be watching from my street location....WEATHER PERMITTING!!!!!...of course!!! the weather's not really supposed to be cooperating here in Rhode Island!....but we'll see!!!!
5 stars
AUDREY FISCHER from ILLINOIS said:
Muhamad... EVERYone can see the transit as long as there is a sunny sky (and your timing is right : ) Try a simple pin-hole projection of the transit! All you need is 2 sheets of white paper!-Whether or not you have a solar filtered telescope, PST, or solar glasses... it is STILL FUN to do a solar projection too. Here's what you do... You need 2 sheets of white paper or card stock. (if you want to get fancy for a cleaner/rounder pin hole-- use tin foil taped to cardboard where you made a little cut-out for it.) Make a tiny pin-hole in the paper or tinfoil. Stand with your back toward the sun. Hold up your paper with the pin-hole and allow the sun to shine through. Catch the light with the other sheet of white paper (taped to a book or clipboard). Manually adjust the distance between the two papers for the best focus. You will instantly witness Venus transit the Sun! Remember to look around for natural projections all around you. A tree will often cast hundreds of projections through tiny holes in its leaves. I saw a cool example of this on fb of a tree that cast hundreds of eclipse projections on the face of a white garage door. Nature does it best! Enjoy... and share this global event! One World*One Sky cheers+stars!
12
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