Venus transits across the sun
It's a spectacle that won't repeat for another century - the sight of Venus slowly inching across the face of the sun.
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None of us will likely see Venus pass, like a moving beauty spot, across the face of the sun again.
From the U.S. to South Korea, people around the world turned their attention to the daytime sky on Tuesday and early Wednesday in Asia to make sure they caught the rare sight of the transit of Venus. The next one won't be for another 105 years.
On June 5-6 2012, SDO is collecting images of one of the rarest predictable solar events: the transit of Venus across the face of the sun. This event happens in pairs eight years apart that are separated from each other by 105 or 121 years. The last transit was in 2004 and the next will not happen until 2117. (NASA Photo) -
Venus is silhouetted as it crosses in front of the sun as it sets behind the Kansas City, Mo. skyline on Tuesday, June 5, 2012. From the U.S. to South Korea, people around the world turned their attention to the daytime sky on Tuesday and early Wednesday in Asia to make sure they caught the once-in-a-lifetime sight of the transit of Venus, which won't be seen for another 105 years. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
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The complete 7-hour transit will be visible from the Pacific coast of United States, eastern Asia and eastern Australia. In India this spectacle will be visible around 7:00 am IST on Wednesday (June 6) in most parts of the country. Image: Transit of Venus as seen from Hyderabad.
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This will be the seventh transit visible since German astronomer Johannes Kepler first predicted the phenomenon in the 17th century. Because of the shape and speed of Venus' orbit around the sun and its relationship to Earth's annual trip, transits occur in pairs separated by more than a century. Image: Transit of Venus seen by people in Ahmedabad