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How to watch Mercury travel across the face of the Sun on Monday – The Verge, The Verge

How to watch Mercury travel across the face of the Sun on Monday – The Verge, The Verge


  

On Monday, November 11, the planet Mercury will pass directly between Earth and the Sun in an event that won’t happen again for another thirteen years. During this transit, Mercury will be visible as a tiny pinprick of darkness against the Sun’s surface.

This transit will start at 7: 35 AM ET and will last for about five and a half hours, giving people plenty of time to check in on the planet’s progress. Weather permitting, people in South America and eastern North America will have the best view of the entire transit, but other parts of the world, including western North America, Europe and Africa will be able to catch up on at least part of the action.

  

                   NASA         

If you do want to enjoy the show, please remember that looking directly at the Sun isvery dangerous.Also, unlikea solar eclipse, you probably won’t be able to see anything yourself without specialized equipment – and your leftover eclipse glasses don’t count. AsNASA notes on a postabout the transit: “even with solar viewing glasses, Mercury is too small to be easily seen with the unaided eye.” You’ll need a telescope or binoculars outfitted with a special solar filter to watch the transit as it happens.

If you don’t have a solar filter equipped telescope, or alocal astronomy clubor observatory nearby, you can still watch the fun .Sloohwill have a live stream of the event starting around 7: 30 AM ET. NASA’sSolar Dynamics Observatorywill also be tracking the event, and will beuploading imagesof the event as it happens.

  

                                                       NASA             

Thelast time Mercury transitedthe Sun was in May 2016, when astronomers managed to capture someIncredibly crisp footage– andgorgeous pictures– of the event.

This particular event is a big deal for astronomy enthusiasts. Mercury won’t make another transit until 2032, when it will be viewable in most of Asia, Europe, Africa, Australia, and South America. People in North America will have an even longer wait – the next Mercury transit visible there won’t happen until 2049.

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