Thursday, July 26, 2012

Transit of Venus 2012

The Transit of Venus is one of the rarest predictable astronomical events that comes around twice within eight years but not again for another 105 years.  The next one will take place in 2117.  On the evening of June 5th I took the telescope down to the water treatment plant in Point Edward and was fortunate to have clear skies even though it was predicted to be cloudy.

Watching the Transit of Venus near the mouth of the St. Clair river.
A solar filter was fitted over the front of the telescope which blocked out the majority of light enabling safe viewing.  The filter can be seen in the above picture.  The telescope is a Celestron Sky Seeker refractor fitted with a computer that controls a motor driving the mount enabling it to track the object you are viewing.  
A photo of the Sun taken during the Transit of Venus on the 5th of June 2012.
The above photo was taken with my DSLR held up to the eyepiece.  I had to play with the apeture settings in order to capture the sunspots and the planet Venus as it traveled across the face of the Sun.

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