Venus Transit Finished 220
KjetilK writes "Venus is just about to cross the solar disc.
Direct from the control room in the Frogner Park in Oslo, I'm pleased to inform you that we have a great webcast, and as far as we know, it is the only webcast that still stands upright... Slashdotters, do your worst! ;-) A Venus transit is one of the most unique astronomical events in our time, in fact, no living person has witnessed it before today. And today, more people have seen it from the park where I'm sitting that in the rest of human history. Also, it had tremendous importance for the development of science, as it gave the first absolute measurements of distances in the solar system. Especially in 1769, a transit made science take huge leaps forward. And BTW, New Zealand and Australia were 'discovered' in the process" Some nice photos from the UK, photos from vt-2004.org, and if you missed it, it'll be eight short years till you can try again.
Another article (Score:5, Informative)
Snippet:
How transits can determine distances:
Re:Another article (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Another article (Score:2, Interesting)
The method described apparently requires the astronomers to have synched clocks spread out over the globe. Since NTP was not in widespread use in 1716, how did they manage to keep the clocks in sync despite the long distances, different time zones and slow rates of travel back then?
Not saying it's impos
Re:Another article (Score:2, Insightful)
Jupiter (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Another article (Score:2)
how did they manage to keep the clocks in sync despite the long distances, different time zones and slow rates of travel back then?
Well by looking at the phase of the moon. If you know at what time the moon will be in what phase at a given loaction, you can calculate your location by the difference in time as measured by the sun.
Unfortunately, this requires quite a bit more math than you think, and the margin of error is quite high without very good instruments. TZhis would probably be why Captian Cook's
Re:Another article (Score:2)
Re:Another article (Score:4, Informative)
Yep, and they were off by a factor 20, whereas the Venus method allowed 18th century astronomers to calculate the distance to within about 10% of the correct value.
Reference:
Greeks [washington.edu]
urp. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:urp. (Score:5, Funny)
There once was a transit of Venus
That in the States went quite unseen-us
But in the UK
I watched it all day
And made a sundial of my penis
(posting AC because I hate to cheat in my limericks. "Unseen-us?" Blech...)
Re:urp. (Score:5, Funny)
Which put that small planet between us
But you shouldn't stare
At the solar glare
'Cause it might shrivel up your... retinas.
Simultaneous Transit with the Space Station (Score:5, Interesting)
Heard about this on NPR this am (Score:4, Informative)
Some more pictures (Score:2, Interesting)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Way to go! (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, that was the case when submitted, but the editors thought it was best to wait until its over before putting it on the frontpage.
So the way it works is... when someone asks to slashdot a webcast, wait til its over to put it on the front page, but when an anonymous poster points to an IP (not a domain), slashdot the hell outta it [slashdot.org].
Re:Way to go! (Score:2)
I had plans to submit it long ago, but I've been working around-the-clock lately, so I didn't have time to post anything intelligent (?) before about half-way....
I had really great plans that would attract /.-ers, like a dynamically updated bittorrents, but I never got around to do that....
However, for those having timed the contacts, check out my AU calculator [owl.uio.no]! But note that that's a tiny,
Site down so here's an ASCII pic (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Site down so here's an ASCII pic (Score:4, Funny)
No, this is (Score:4, Funny)
Very similar to... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Very similar to... (Score:2)
Re:Site down so here's an ASCII pic (Score:2)
Hey, that's exactly what it really looked like!
I was up at dawn (more or less in the middle of the eastern time zone, so about 2 hours before the transit was complete) and just as the sun cleared the horizon the morning mist was thick enough that you could look directly at the (deep red, very dim) solar disk, and there was a tiny but clearly visible black dot, pretty much exactly in the location shown in the "ascii image", and about the same size relative to the sun.
The mist was thick enough that as the s
Re:Site down so here's an ASCII pic (Score:2)
pics i took (Score:5, Interesting)
Just wanna share with you folks some pics [waterlogic.com.sg] I took using nothing but the most basic equipment, including using a piece of Epson inkjet paper for projecting the image...
Re:pics i took (Score:2)
Great Venus pics too, thanks!
Re:pics i took (Score:2)
Just a wild guess, but judging by the web address under his name in the .sg domain, I'd say probably Singapore. Certainly fits the palm trees and places-where-venus-transit-was-visible requirements.
Re:pics i took (Score:2, Informative)
This is slashdot and all, but if you'd read the words, instead of just looking at the pictures, you'd have seen this:
Welcome to my poor man's experience of the Venus Transit of 2004, from the far eastern island of Singapore.
Re:pics i took (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:pics i took (Score:2, Interesting)
See the 4th image in the news in pictures section [bbc.co.uk]
My image is also appearing on the front page [bbc.co.uk] (about 50% of the time)
The spectacle of the transit and that made my day ;-)
Re:pics i took (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:pics i took (Score:2, Interesting)
very rad (Score:2)
Not quite finished. (Score:5, Funny)
Impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Impressive (Score:3, Interesting)
Venus Transit of June 8, 2004 - A Breakthrough of Intuitive Awareness [evenstarcreations.com].
Sure it's not the end of the world but superstitious lunaticism nevertheless...
Re:Impressive (Score:2)
The end is near!
(I couldn't just leave you hanging there)
Re:Impressive (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Impressive (Score:2)
Graphic Here [wurd.org]
Re:Impressive (Score:3, Interesting)
Check out this article [abovetopsecret.com] that links the Transit of Venus to the Islamic prophecies of the Black Winds of Death, an al-Qaeda plot to attack on the 1,000th day of terror and setting off a volcano in Yellowstone with a nuke.
I'd say that pretty much defines "lunatic."
Ah well (Score:2)
The great indicator... (Score:5, Funny)
It amuses me that any channel that covers these kind of events spends 2% of their times covering the basics of astronomy and why this event is quite rare.
The other 98% is spent explaining the danger of staring directly at the sun.
Then... I go to the park to eat my lunch in the sunshine (rare in the UK) only to see hoards of people doing exactly this (or thinking that cheap sunglasses will protect them). Worse is mothers trying to show their kids ("Mummy, mummy, I cant see anything... and my eyes hurt"... "Just keep looking sweety... you will see it when your eyes lose sensativity!").
So a further warning to slashdotters...
Dont stare directly at the sun...
Just get someone else to do it and descibe it to you
Re:The great indicator... (Score:3, Funny)
But that where the fun is! (Score:2)
It's possible... (Score:2)
...just be sure to rub SPF 30 sunblock into your eyes before you try. Safety first!
Weaselmancer
Pictures (Score:3, Funny)
6 years early.... (Score:2, Funny)
Mercury (Score:2)
So how often does the Mercury transit occur?
Re:Mercury (Score:2)
Google sez..... 12 times a century.
Re:Mercury (Score:2)
They said last century was 14 times
Re:Mercury (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Mercury (Score:4, Informative)
Transits of Mercury: 2001-2100
Date Time
2003 May 07 07:52
2006 Nov 08 21:41
2016 May 09 14:57
2019 Nov 11 15:20
2032 Nov 13 08:54
2039 Nov 07 08:46
2049 May 07 14:24
2052 Nov 09 02:30
2062 May 10 21:37
2065 Nov 11 20:07
2078 Nov 14 13:42
2085 Nov 07 13:36
2095 May 08 21:08
2098 Nov 10 07:18
Re:Mercury (Score:2)
New Zealand / Australia (Score:2, Informative)
His biggest discovery was what he didn't find -- at the time, there was considerable belief in the idea of a "great southern land" somewhere in the Pacific, and Cooks thr
this is unique (Score:2, Interesting)
Venus on your desktop! (Score:4, Informative)
Australia (Score:4, Informative)
Recording the transit of Venus was the official reason for Cooks voyage to Tahiti - he carried precise scientific instruments to record it, as recording it from different locations around the world would provide valuable information.
Once this was done, Cook opened a secret envelope which contained the real reason for his voyage - to discover the great unknown land mass in the south (Australia) and claim it for England.
Photos (Score:2, Informative)
Cook more "claimed" Australia than discovered. (Score:4, Interesting)
Cook knew there was a continent there from all of those maps and also from the accounts of all the other sailors that had been tooling around the area during the previous century. So he never really discovered it per se, more just claimed it for England. In fact as he was running around the Sydney area, the Frenchman La Perouse was also in the same area at the same time.
If anything the discovery of Oz by westerners should be credited to the Dutch, who ran into the west coast when they forgot to turn left on their trips around South Africa, and up to the East Indies. Google for Dirk Hartog and the silver plate he nailed to a tree well before Cook was a glimmer in his fathers eye. If the areas the Dutch had seen had a been a little bit more fertile, instead of bordering on major desert, then they might have wanted to spend a bit more time there. But when you are colonising sort of chap, a very dry west coast is not really all that appealing.
Of course if you want true discovery you have to go back to Aborigines who have been here for more than 40,000 years. And before you discount them as primative stone age relics, have a read of Guns Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond, and consider that their society was STABLE for 10s of THOUSANDS of years. Anyone want to take bets if western society can remain stable for another 100 years?????
Finally we have to thank you Yanks for the actual colonisation of Oz by the Brits. If you hadn't had that little war of independence back a few years ago, the Brits would not have had to find a new location for their crims. And I would have grown up speaking with a North American accent
Re:Cook more "claimed" Australia than discovered. (Score:4, Funny)
But did they have any flags?
Re:Cook more "claimed" Australia than discovered. (Score:2)
Finally we have to thank you Yanks for the actual colonisation of Oz by the Brits. If you hadn't had that little war of independence back a few years ago, the Brits would not have had to find a new location for their crims.
Jeez, just do what we did. All it takes is a few friends in the French navy.
And I would have grown up speaking with a North American accent ..
You should thank us for that. Y'all. ;^)
Weaselmancer
Re:Cook more "claimed" Australia than discovered. (Score:2)
But as for "discovery". Cook knew there was something there. He just sailed until he tripped over it. You can't discover something you already know about from the reports of others.
It wasn't until Flinders circumnavigated the place in 1802/1803 that we could probably conclusively say that we had an island continent.
Re:Cook more "claimed" Australia than discovered. (Score:2)
Full Color Telescope Picture (Score:2, Informative)
Transits of Venus not only way to measure AU (Score:3, Interesting)
Though it is certainly true that astronomers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries spent a great deal of time and energy travelling to the far corners of the Earth to observe transits of Venus, these rare events were NOT their only chances to measure the absolute size of the solar system. Simultaneous or near-simultaneous measurements of Mars or certain asteroids also allow one to derive absolute distances via parallax; although the targets are more distant than Venus, they provide significantly better observing conditions and references for astrometry. Cassini, for example, used measurements of Mars in 1672 to calculate the Astronomical Unit (the distance between Earth and Sun) to better than 10 percent.
Still, transits of Venus were certainly a major focus for the astronomical community. I wrote up material on the geometry and history of transits for a seminar: read it for yourself [rit.edu]. There are links to other good sites at the end of my lecture.
Best transit photo (Score:5, Interesting)
LINK [cmu.edu]
Look down the page to see the "ring of light" images which prove Venus has an atmosphere (as if we didn't already know).
-berek halfhand
Yep, that's really cool... (Score:2)
A few other pictures (Score:5, Interesting)
Nice color:
http://www.pbase.com/image/29906625 [pbase.com]
Impressive quality:
http://cakeru.image.pbase.com/image/29912804/larg
Re:A few other pictures (Score:2)
Living people have indeed witnessed Venus transits (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, this actually isn't true.
Plenty of living people have witnessed Venus transits before today.
What is true is that nobody now living has ever personally witnessed a Venus transit, since the last one occurred over 100 years ago, and everyone who witnessed it is now dead.
Re:Living people have indeed witnessed Venus trans (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Living people have indeed witnessed Venus trans (Score:2)
Venus shattering kaboom (Score:2, Funny)
These pics are amazing... (Score:2, Informative)
Too bad I couldn't see the transit from my place. Maybe in 2012 I can be in the right location. Does any Hawaiian, Japanese or Polinesian slashdotter have a room for rent in June 2012?
solar disc? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:solar disc? (Score:3, Informative)
BBC Program tonight. (Score:3, Informative)
More Information [bbc.co.uk]
Great event! (Score:4, Interesting)
Our norwegian, super-enthusiastic astrophysiologist, Knut Jørgen Røed Ødegaard, really made my day. Props to him for being who he is, a real geek without being afraid of showing it. And he thinks these things are so extremely fun, that I think so myself.
And the best of it all was that he asked his girlfriend to marry him, in the middle of the whole set. Mad, mad, mad man. But still so great, and so much fun.
Well, and to argue against those just saying "What the heck, it's just a black spot": Well, if I only had the chance of singing "Amazing Grace" once every century, I'd probably do it. Not because it's a good song, but because it's special. After all, it just happens once every seldom time. And the last time, it gave us many answers to astroscientific questions.
Phew, no getting up at 5:30 for astrological events the next few weeks.
Re:Great event! (Score:3, Interesting)
We had a really great time too! :-)
And none of us had any idea what he was up to just before it happened. I had seen her before, but I really didn't know who she was. I was sitting inside the mixing bus, and we were like "who is she, what's going to happen?" And then we just ran out to congratulate them.
To describe the setup: It's in a rather large park, and in one corner, we have a stage with some good sound and a 40 m^2 big screen, and some TV cameras running around, feeding pict
Re:Great event! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great event! (Score:3, Funny)
Did anyone else expect a short skit by Monty Python to follow this sentence??
Finished? (Score:2)
Spectacular Venus Transit links (Score:2, Informative)
and
Real webcast of event:
http://www.miamisci.org:8080/ramgen/starg
19th Century Venus Transit Quote (Score:5, Interesting)
"There will be no other [transit of Venus] till the twenty-first century of our era has dawned upon the earth, and the June flowers are blooming in 2004. What will be the state of science when the next transit season arrives God only knows." - William Harkness, USNO, 1882.
Re:19th Century Venus Transit Quote (Score:2)
XEYES? (Score:3, Funny)
From Pomfret, CT, outside of Hartford (Score:4, Interesting)
http://tech.pomfretschool.org/~jl/images/venustran sit.jpg [pomfretschool.org]
8-year joke prediction (Score:5, Insightful)
A Møøse once bit my sister... (Score:2, Funny)
Mynd you, møøse bites Kan be pretty nasti...
Wi nøt trei a høliday in Sweden this yër ?
Re:A Moose once bit my sister... (Score:2)
Some of my photos, FWIW (Score:2)
Re:WTF!!!? (Score:3, Informative)
Though, even if it didn't, there are websites other than
Re:WTF!!!? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Next Time (Score:2, Informative)
mencoder -mf type=jpg mf://*jpg -o movie.avi -ovc lavc -lavcopts vcodec=mpeg4:mbd=2:trell:cbp:mv0
I'm usure about how copyright for the images works and if someone would be allowed to make such a film publicly available. That would lessen the burden on that server. Perhaps.
Re:Next Time (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:In case of Slashdotting-Article Text (Score:2, Funny)
I don't know, this sounds more like the transit of Uranus.
Re:In case of Slashdotting-Article Text (Score:2, Informative)
Re:And a helpful picture (Score:2)
Actually.... (Score:2, Interesting)
*Kids, don't try this at home! And adults too for that matter... unless sanctioned by professional observational astronomers
Re:unique events (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you will find that the frequency of Really Interesting Events hasn't changed.
What has changed, however, is the amount of publicity they get. Thanks to facilities like this one, more people know about them. At one time only people who read specialist literature knew about various comets, oppositions, and so on.
...laura