Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6121822.stm
Skygazers await Mercury transit
Mercury will appear as a tiny dot against the Sun's disc
Astronomers in the Americas, East Asia and Oceania will get a rare opportunity to see Mercury pass in a direct line across the Sun this week.
The closest planet to our star will be visible as a tiny black dot creeping over the solar face from 1912 GMT on Wednesday to 0010 GMT on Thursday.
The last Mercury transit was in 2003; the next will be on 9 May 2016.
The entire transit can be seen from the western US, south-east Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the South Pacific.
Part of the transit will be visible before sunset on Wednesday in the rest of the Americas and after sunrise on Thursday in East Asia and the rest of Australia.
Skygazers await Mercury transit
Mercury will appear as a tiny dot against the Sun's disc
Astronomers in the Americas, East Asia and Oceania will get a rare opportunity to see Mercury pass in a direct line across the Sun this week.
The closest planet to our star will be visible as a tiny black dot creeping over the solar face from 1912 GMT on Wednesday to 0010 GMT on Thursday.
The last Mercury transit was in 2003; the next will be on 9 May 2016.
The entire transit can be seen from the western US, south-east Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the South Pacific.
Part of the transit will be visible before sunset on Wednesday in the rest of the Americas and after sunrise on Thursday in East Asia and the rest of Australia.