Transit of Mercury

This article is about the astronomical phenomenon on Earth. For other uses, see Transit of Mercury (disambiguation).
Transit of Mercury on May 9, 2016
Transit of Mercury on November 8, 2006 with sunspots #921, 922, and 923
Mercury transiting the Sun as viewed by the rover Curiosity on Mars (June 3, 2014).[1]

A transit of Mercury across the Sun takes place when the planet Mercury passes directly between the Sun and a superior planet, becoming visible against (and hence obscuring a small portion of) the solar disk. During a transit, Mercury appears as a tiny black dot moving across the disk of the Sun.

Transits of Mercury with respect to Earth are much more frequent than transits of Venus, with about 13 or 14 per century, in part because Mercury is closer to the Sun and orbits it more rapidly.

Transits of Mercury occur in May or November. The last four transits occurred on November 15, 1999; May 7, 2003; November 8, 2006; and May 9, 2016. The next will occur on November 11, 2019, and then on November 13, 2032. A typical transit lasts several hours.

On June 3, 2014, the Mars rover Curiosity observed the planet Mercury transiting the Sun, marking the first time a planetary transit has been observed from a celestial body besides Earth. [1]

More generally, transits can also occur for Venus[2] and were investigated in the context of searching for the hypothetical inner planet Vulcan.

Scientific observations

The most common observation to be made at a transit is to record the times when the disk of Mercury appears to be in contact with the limb of the Sun. Those contacts are traditionally referred to as the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th contacts – with the 2nd and 3rd contacts occurring when the disk of Mercury is fully on the disk of the sun. As a general rule, 1st and 4th contacts cannot be accurately detected, while 2nd and 3rd contacts are readily visible within the constraints of the Black Drop effect, irradiation, atmospheric conditions, and the quality of the optics being used.

Observed contact times for transits between 1677 and 1881 are given in S Newcomb's analysis of transits of Mercury.[3] Observed 2nd and 3rd contacts times for transits between 1677 and 1973 are given in Royal Greenwich Observatory Bulletin No.181, 359-420 (1975).[4]

Examples of the scientific investigations based on transits of Mercury are:

Images of the 1999 Nov 15 transit from the Transition Region and Coronal explorer (TRACE) satellite were on Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) on 1999 Nov 19[14] Three APOD's featured the 2016 May 9 transit.[15][16][17]

Occurrence of transits

Transits of Mercury can only occur when the Earth is aligned with a node of Mercury's orbit. Currently that alignment occurs within a few days of May 8 (descending node) and November 10 (ascending node), with the angular diameter of Mercury being about 12" for May transits, and 10" for November transits. The average date for a transit increases over centuries as a result of the longitude of the nodes of Mercury's orbit increasing by about 1.1 deg per century.

Transits of Mercury occur on a regular basis. As explained in 1882 by Newcomb,[18] the interval between passages of Mercury through the ascending node of its orbit is 87.969 days, and the interval between the Earth's passage through that same longitude is 365.254 days. From the ratio of these values, it can be easily shown that Mercury will make an almost integral number of revolutions about the Sun over intervals of 4, 6, 7, 13, 33, 46, 171 and 217 years.

In 1894 Crommelin [19] noted that at these intervals, the successive paths of Mercury relative to the Sun are consistently displaced northwards or southwards. He noted the displacements as:

Displacements at subsequent transits

Interval May
transits
November
transits
After 6 years 65’ 37" S 31' 35" N
After 7 years 48’ 21" N 23' 16" S
Hence after 13 years (6+7) 17’ 16" S   8’ 19" N
... 20 years (1x6 + 2x7) 31’ 05" N 14’ 57" S
... 33 years (2x6 + 3x7) 13’ 49" N   6’ 38" S
... 46 years (3x13 + 7)   3’ 27" S   1’ 41" N
... 217 years (14x13 + 5x7)   0’ 17" N (nowadays, see talk)   0’ 14" N (nowadays, see talk)

Comparing these displacements with the solar diameter (about 31.7’ for May, and 32.4’ for November, transits) the following may be deduced about the interval between transits:

Transits that occur 46 years apart can be grouped into a series. For November transits each series includes about 20 transits over 874 years, with the path of Mercury across the Sun passing further north than for the previous transit. For May transits each series includes about 10 transits over 414 years, with the path of Mercury across the Sun passing further south than for the previous transit. Some authors[20] have allocated a series number to transits on the basis of this 46-year grouping.

Similarly transits that occur 217 years apart can be grouped into a series. For November transits each series would include about 135 transits over 30,000 years. For May transits each series would include about 110 transits over 24,000 years. For both the May and November series, the path of Mercury across the Sun passes further north than for the previous transit. Series numbers have not been traditionally allocated on the basis of the 217 year grouping.

Predictions of transits of Mercury covering many years are available at [20][21][22]

Partial transits of Mercury

November 15, 1999 simulated transit of Mercury across the Sun.

Sometimes Mercury appears to only graze the Sun during a transit. There are two possible scenarios

The possibility where, at mid-transit, Mercury is seen to be fully on the solar disk from some parts of the world, and to completely miss the Sun as seen from other parts of the world, cannot occur.

Past and future transits

The first observation of a transit of Mercury was on November 7, 1631 by Pierre Gassendi. Johannes Kepler had however predicted the occurrence of transits of Mercury and Venus some time before that. Gassendi unsuccessfully attempted to observe the transit of Venus just one month later, but due to inaccurate astronomical tables he did not realize that it was not visible from most of Europe, including Paris. A transit of Venus was not observed until 1639, by Jeremiah Horrocks. The table below does not include all historical transits of Mercury.

Past transits of Mercury
Date of
mid-transit
Time (UTC) Notes
Start Mid End
1631 Nov 7 Observed by Pierre Gassendi.
1651 Nov 3 Observed by Jeremy Shakerly in Surat, reported in letter to Henry Osbourne, January 1652. Shakerly is thought to have died in India around 1655.[25]
1661 May 3 Occurred on the day of the coronation of King Charles II of England. Observed by Christiaan Huygens in London.
1677 Nov 7 Observed by Edmund Halley in St Helena and Richard Towneley in Lancashire to determine solar parallax, also noted by Jean Charles Gallet in Avignon; as reported in a letter from John Flamsteed to Johannes Hevelius 23 May 1678.[26]
1743 Nov 5 Coordinated scientific observations were organized by Joseph-Nicolas Delisle worldwide.
1753 May 6  
1769 Nov 9 23:09 Observed by Charles Green and James Cook from Mercury Bay in New Zealand.[27] Noted that Mercury had little or no atmosphere.
1802 Nov 9 06:16 08:58 11:41 Observed by William Herschel in England.[28]
1815 Nov 12 00:20 02:33 04:46  
1822 Nov 5 01:04 02:25 03:45  
1832 May 5 09:04 12:25 15:47  
1835 Nov 7 17:35 20:08 22:41  
1845 May 8 16:24 19:37 22:49  
1848 Nov 9 11:07 13:48 16:28  
1861 Nov 12 05:21 07:19 09:18  
1868 Nov 5 05:28 07:14 09:00  
1878 May 6 15:16 19:00 22:44  
1881 Nov 6–7 22:19 00:57 03:36  
1891 May 8–9 23:57 02:22 04:47  
1894 Nov 10 15:58 18:35 21:11  
1907 Nov 14 10:24 12:07 13:50  
1914 Nov 7 09:57 12:03 14:09  
1924 May 8–9 21:44 01:41 05:38  
1927 Nov 10 03:02 05:46 08:29  
1937 May 11 08:53 08:59 09:06 Only visible as partial transit in Southern Africa, Southern Arabia, South Asia and Western Australia.
1940 Nov 11–12 20:49 23:21 01:53  
1953 Nov 14 15:37 16:54 18:11  
1957 May 5–6 23:59 01:14 02:30  
1960 Nov 7 14:34 16:53 19:12 [29]
1970 May 9 04:19 08:16 12:13 [30]
1973 Nov 10 07:47 10:32 13:17 [31]
1986 Nov 13 01:43 04:07 06:31 [32]
1993 Nov 6 03:06 03:57 04:47 [33]
1999 Nov 15
21:15 21:41 22:07 [34] Partial transit in Australia, Antarctica and New Zealand's South Island.
2003 May 7 05:13 07:52 10:32 [35]
2006 Nov 8
18:12 20:41 23:10 [36]
2016 May 9
11:12 14:57 18:42
Entire transit in S. America, eastern N. America, western Europe; part of transit everywhere else except Australia and far eastern Asia.[37]
Future transits of Mercury
Date of
mid-transit
Time (UTC) Notes
Start Mid End
2019 Nov 11
12:35 15:20 18:04
2032 Nov 13 06:41 08:54 11:07  
2039 Nov 7 07:17 08:46 10:15  
2049 May 7 11:03 14:24 17:44  
2052 Nov 8–9 22:53 01:29 04:06  
2062 May 10–11 18:16 21:36 01:00  
2065 Nov 11–12 19:24 22:06 01:48  
2078 Nov 14 11:42 13:41 15:39  
2085 Nov 7 11:42 13:34 15:26  
2095 May 8–9 17:20 21:05 00:50  
2098 Nov 10 04:35 07:16 09:57  
2108 May 12 01:40 04:16 06:52  

See also

References


  1. 1 2 Webster, Guy (June 10, 2014). "Mercury Passes in Front of the Sun, as Seen From Mars". NASA. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  2. Transits of Venus
  3. 1 2 Newcomb S, APAE Vol 1, 1882, from page 367
  4. Morrison LV and Ward CG, Royal Greenwich Observatory Bulletin No.181, 359-420 (1975)
  5. Innes RTA, (1925) Union Obs Circ, No. 65
  6. Spencer Jones H, (1939) MNRAS 99, 541
  7. Morrison LV & Ward CG, (1975) MNRAS 173, 183
  8. Morrison LV, Parkinson, & Stevenson, Nature, 288, 548-551 (1980)
  9. Sigismondo C http://www.icra.it/gerbertus/2016/Gerb-9-2016-Sigismondi-transito-83-86.pdf
  10. "Schneider G, Pasachoff Jay M, & Leon Golub L, (2004), "TRACE Observations of the 15 November 1999 Transit of Mercury and the Black Drop Effect: Considerations for the 2004 Transit of Venus," Icarus 168, 249-256." (PDF).
  11. Pasachoff, Jay M., Glenn Schneider G, & Golub L, 2003, "Space Studies of the Black Drop Effect at a Mercury Transit," IAU01082, presented at the Joint Discussion on Mercury, Sydney General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union, #1204, p. 156.
  12. Pasachoff Jay M., & Sheehan B, (2012), "Lomonosov, the Discovery of Venus's Atmosphere, and Eighteenth-century Transits of Venus," Journal for the History and Heritage of Astronomy 15 (1), RP1, 1-12.
  13. Pasachoff, Jay M., Schneider G & Willson RC, (2008), "Total Solar Irradiance at the 2006 Transit of Mercury and Application to Transiting Exoplanet Observations," Cornell DPS Meeting; abstract: Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 40, #3, 404.
  14. Nemiroff, R.; Bonnell, J., eds. (19 November 1999). "Mercury And The Sun". Astronomy Picture of the Day. NASA.
  15. Nemiroff, R.; Bonnell, J., eds. (11 May 2016). "A Mercury Transit Music Video from SDO". Astronomy Picture of the Day. NASA.
  16. Nemiroff, R.; Bonnell, J., eds. (12 May 2016). "A Transit of Mercury". Astronomy Picture of the Day. NASA.
  17. Nemiroff, R.; Bonnell, J., eds. (13 May 2016). "ISS and Mercury Too". Astronomy Picture of the Day. NASA.
  18. Newcomb S, APAE, Vol 1 (1882), pp 477-487
  19. Crommelin P, The Observatory, Dec 1894, pp394-397
  20. 1 2 {http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/transit/catalog/MercuryCatalog.html, Espenak}
  21. http://www.solexorb.it/SolexOld/ and then click on Mercury
  22. 1 2 http://fourmilab.ch/documents/canon_transits/
  23. "1999 Transit of Mercury". nasa.gov. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  24. "The November 15, 1999 Transit of Mercury.". astroleague.org. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  25. Chapman, A. (1985), Transactions of the Historical Society of Lancashire and Cheshire Volume 135 pp 1–14
  26. Eric G. Forbes et al. (1995), Correspondence of John Flamsteed Volume 1, Institute of Physics Publishing, p. 624–627
  27. Wayne Orchiston 1994, James Cook and the 1769 Transit OF Mercury, Carter Observatory ISSN 1173-7263 http://www.transitofvenus.co.nz/docs/CarterObservatoryInfo3.doc
  28. Magazine of Popular Science, and Journal of the Useful Arts, Volume 3 p.154
  29. "1960 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  30. "1970 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  31. "1973 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  32. "1986 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  33. "1993 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  34. "1999 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  35. "2003 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  36. "2006 Transit of Mercury". HM Nautical Almanac Office. UK Hydrographic Office. November 5, 2007. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  37. "The Transit of Mercury on 2016 May 9". Retrieved June 7, 2012.
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