2003 Transit of Mercury 124
angkor writes "It is happening today (all day in Asia)!
NASA's SOHO page, Fred Espenak's 'Transit of Mercury' site, and live webcasts of the transit. You'll want to use the webcast, in spite of advice from our hometown paper, the Bangkok Post, which reported 'those interested in viewing it directly were advised to watch through black tinted glasses.'"
Already finished (Score:5, Informative)
The transit is already over. Here [eso.org] is a direct link to the ESO site about it (with pictures). There's a Venus transit coming up next year, however, which is much rarer.
Re:Already finished (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Already finished (Score:5, Insightful)
It might be a novel idea to Taco and friends to post these stories _in advance_ of the actual event, not when it's already gone. *sigh*
Re:Already finished (Score:4, Informative)
I use the term loosly, but
Re:Already finished (Score:1)
I suppose it depends on what you want.
If you only want people with a deep love of astronomy to know about upcoming events, then you're dead on.
If you want to try to introduce newcomers to the delights of celestrial events, then you want to have sites like Slashdot put up the articles ahead of time.
I consider myself fairly interested in astronomical events. I've gone out in freezing cold weather for meteor showers. I've sat on a rooftop to get a good view of a lunar eclipse. (And I'll be out photographing
Re:Already finished (Score:2)
That's one of several definitions, and it would be a big mistake if such a definition (e.g.: 'a report of recent events') was the only one slashdot posters would use to interpret their mission statement. You could also say, as slashdot is a news site, everything they report is news. Even if it's about something that hasn't happened yet.
News is also, by definition, everything that is newsworthy.
Re:Already finished (Score:4, Funny)
Planetary Information Minister Mohammed al-Sahhaf
Re:Already finished (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, I was plugging our own webcast [astronomy.no] (from four cities in Norway, two of them had great weather), but that is all too late now...
Watch through black glasses (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, and then they don't need black glasses no more. Or any glasses, for that matter. Or even light.
Re:Watch through black glasses (Score:2)
Re:Watch through black glasses (Score:1)
Sunglasses (Score:5, Informative)
It only takes a couple of stupid incidents like this to strike fear in parents and teachers everywhere. Now many schools close the blinds and go through what ammounts to a 'duck and cover' bomb drill whenever there's an eclipse.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
why can't our teachers be smarter?
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2, Funny)
Destoo..
(these are not dots. It's my drool leaking on the keyboard and to the internet)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2, Interesting)
Confronted with the smaller amount of illumination from a crescent sun, one's pupils will dilate wider than they would when looking at a full sun. But, given fixed pupil size, the energy per sq. mm within the image of the sun on the retina is the same whether it full or a crescent.
So, wider pupils means greater energy per area on the retina (within the image of the sun), and so greater chance of damage to the retina in that area.
Note t
Re:Sunglasses (Score:5, Informative)
Whether or not you are more likely to want to stare at an eclipse is irrelevant. It is the fact that you can comfortably stare at an eclipse long enough to cause retinal damage whereas you cannot easily do this otherwise with the sun.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting note, Richard Feynman watched the first nuclear blast throuh car windows, which block UV.
The goggles they gave hime where to dark for his tastes.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
See http://www.eclipse99.com/safety.html [eclipse99.com]
Re:Sunglasses (Score:5, Informative)
To quote the aforementioned link:
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
Our (US) teachers can't be smarter because we (the people of the US) do not pay them enough.
Most "smart" people are attracted by high-paying jobs. Everyone else are teachers because they are not as smart, or because they are philanthropists-at-heart, passionate about teaching, or because their parents pay for everything so getting paid less doesn't matter.
Go to town meetings a vote for better education funding. Old people with no kids in school and nothing better to do are there whet
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:5, Interesting)
We were of course warned that we shouldn't look at the sun during the eclipse, but the overall impression that most of my fellow students were left with was that being outside during an eclipse was dangerous, like somehow the sun had changed and the light would cause people to go blind or something.
Better to be safe than sorry I suppose, but I recall a few friends getting nervous during the next eclipse several years later.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:5, Informative)
Reference: -1- [utoledo.edu]
-2- [skyandtelescope.com]
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Obviously this reminds me of the famous, most beautifully written short story by a chemist, Isaac Asimov, Nightfall.
Maybe he was writing out of experience? Civilization burning in flames as masses go insane with the eclipse? Well, he was an American... :)
When the people of Most Advanced country in the world has such idiots in power, I wonder what the humanity end in.
If your friends were educated people, you should told them to get rid of their irrational fears.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1, Interesting)
Your school should have made everyone read The Day of The Triffids
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:3, Interesting)
Should have taken the class on a tour to a site with welding equipment. I had a great view of the recent eclipse through one of those welding shields or screens or whatever they are called. I also heard that staring at the eclipse by a reflection in a bucket of water would work nicely...
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Given the choice again I would watch the eclipse on TV, or not bother.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
This teacher I hope was fired. the ony safe way for the kids to watch it would have been the pinhole in a box trick. Otherwise the best thing is to use the proper equipment (Like a telescope with a sun filter)
My daughter has seen ever astronomical event we have had during her lifetime.. CORRECTLY and SAFELY. all it takes is 10 minutes of effort to do it right.
Re:Sunglasses (Score:1)
Don't even bother with welder's goggles... (Score:1)
If it's anything like my transit... (Score:3, Funny)
Don't do it, kids! (Score:5, Informative)
Black tinted glasses? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Black tinted glasses? (Score:2)
Cut a small opening in the side of the box, so you can see the image projected into the inside bottom of the box, when aimed at the sun.
That was the DIY rig my father used when I was a kid way back when, to view a partial eclipse.
Re:Black tinted glasses? (Score:2)
For the partial eclipse last June I made a pinhole camera out of a cardboard box. I taped a piece of white paper inside for a projection screen, poked a tiny hole in a piece of 120 film backing paper (black on the film side) for the pinhole, and stuck the whole thing together with masking tape. Total
Re:black tinted glasses (Score:1)
The poisonous gas is probably vaporized mercury, so you'll probably get heavy metal poisoning.
Not the end of world? (Score:5, Funny)
why not more often? (Score:4, Interesting)
Since Mercury orbits the sun in only 88 days, why can we see transists more often than about 13 times a century (according to space.com)?
Same thing with Venus, since it's in a orbit inside ours it must *at least* pass earth on the 'inside track' once a year. Is it because the orbits a slightly inclined or sometihng?
Re:why not more often? (Score:4, Informative)
It's the same way that you don't get an eclipse during every full and new moon.
Re:why not more often? (Score:1)
ah, should have thought about that! thanks for answering!
Oh, that's easy... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm no expert in these matters, but maybe the transits occur primarily at night when the sun is switched off. This would make sense because Mercury would probably catch on fire if it were to pass so close to the sun while it were hot.
Re:why not more often? (Score:2)
Probably because Mercury and Venus are usually not in the same plane as Earth... i.e. if you picture 3-dimensional space as a box. Sun's in the middle. Earth is, at the moment, in the middle of one edge. Mercury passes between us, but is actually only 1/4 of the way down from the top edge. It would not "cross" the sun to our perspective. But, if Earth were sitting along a top edge, then we might get a transit.
Mercury passes Earth 4 times an earth year (Score:1)
Mercury orbit: 88 days.
Earth orbit: 365 days.
Mercury is 4.14772 times faster than Earth. However, that doesn't mean that it's passes Earth 4.14772 times in an Earth year.
Instead of working out the math using these two rates, think of a 12 hour span and a truely analog clock. The minute and hour hands overlap at the following specific times:
t=12:00 exactly (first pass)
t=between 1:05 and 1:06 (second pass)
t=between 2:10 and 2:11 (third pass
Oops: LESS THAN 4 times an Earth year (Score:1)
Just slightly too late (Score:2)
But then again, the slashdot crowd would have pummeled the webcams. I'd r
Re:Just slightly too late (Score:2)
I have had the lucky experience to see Mercury a while back. I was on a school trip, and the astronomy teacher had everyone look at where the sun was setting over cape cod bay. As soon as the sun had dipped entierly over the horizon, one could see a tiny dot quickly following it. For that brief 2 minutes or so we were able to see
Don't forget the total lunar eclipse in a week! (Score:5, Informative)
Grrrrr... (Score:2)
Anyone in East Asia (I'm in Japan) is SOL according to that link. No eclipse visible here.
Those of you in Europe will get to see it around Moon-set. That sounds pretty cool, as long as the sunrise doesn't drown it out (and I guess it wouldn't). Anyone out there w/ a camera and a long lens (spotting scope, or telescope) care to wake up early and snap a few pictures?
You folks on the west coast of the States will get to see it at
Re:Don't forget the total lunar eclipse in a week! (Score:2)
Re:Don't forget the total lunar eclipse in a week! (Score:2)
Bangkok Post also says... (Score:3, Funny)
Worth watching? (Score:1)
Re:Worth watching? (Score:1)
Rare Event? (Score:1)
Re:Rare Event? (Score:2)
This would only be true if mercury was orbiting in the same (or almost the same) plane as us. IANAA but I would assume this is not the case. This means that this event only happens when the Earth and Mercury are approximately at the point of intersection of the two orbital planes at the correct time.
Re:Rare Event? (Score:4, Informative)
Correct. Mercury's orbit is inclined at 7 degrees to that of the earth. This makes the chances that mercury will cross the solar disk (roughly half a degree apparent diameter) at the exact moment rrequired for a transit pretty slim...
Re:Rare Event? (Score:2)
1 out of 31 isnt all that low of a probability considering some other celestial events.
Re:What if we are in transit? (Score:2)
a) It is not possible for 5 planets to transit the Sun, since only two planets are closer to the sun than Earth.
b) It has never happened before. (see a)
c) Alignments of several planets in a row do happen, if very rarely. The combined gravitational effect of the planets is still tiny when compared to that of the Sun which makes up the VAST majority of the mass of the solar system.
Re:What if we are in transit? (Score:2)
Look, all nine planets were aligned in 2000 or 2001. NOTHING HAPPENED. NOTHING WILL HAPPEN. The gravity of the first five planets is not significant enough to act on one another to that degree. Jupiter may be huge, but it's gravity is barely noticeable on Earth...I'd be surprised if it affected the tides more that
Regardless of where the planets are in regards to each other, there's always gravitational interaction...but it's not enough where you're going
JUPITER ONLY HAS ONE MOON?!!? (Score:1, Funny)
Total Lunar Eclipse: May 15-16, 2003 (Score:3, Interesting)
Summary: Atlantic Ocean, eastern half of the US, eastern third of Canada see the whole thing. People in Europe and Africa see it at moonset, while those in the rest of US and Canada see it at moonrise.
Bah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bah (Score:1)
One day, I did.
That's when the headaches started.
- pi
Mamma always told me... (Score:1)
"But Momma, that's where the fun is!"
Venus Transit next year, June 2004 (Score:3, Interesting)
A Slashdotting wouldn't have helped... (Score:1)
Open source software to simulate and make images (Score:3, Informative)
One particularly good gallery is the Celestial Phenomina [shatters.net] one by "Calculus." An example of a cool image is Saturn transit of the Sun as seen from Uranus in 2669 [shatters.net].
binoculars (Score:2)
Projected images are so much safer than looking through anything, plus more than one person can look at a projected image at the same time.
As Sting said :) (Score:1)