Roughly 13–14 times each thousand years, Venus passes directly in front of the Sun, casting a black silhouette in front of the solar disk for a few hours. Such a transit will occur on 24 May 0546, lasting from 02:38 until 10:31 LMT.
Between those times, the transit will be visible from anywhere on Earth, providing the Sun is above the horizon, including from the Americas, Africa, Russia, Asia and Europe.
Venus last transited the Sun in November 0424, and its next transit will be in May 0554.
Planetary alignment
Venus orbits the Sun once every 225 days, completing each revolution around the Sun in around 7–8 Earth months. Since Venus orbits the Sun more quickly than the Earth, it occasionally overtakes the Earth in its orbit, and at such times the two planets lie side-by-side in their respective orbits.
This alignment is called inferior solar conjunction and occurs once every 584 days (roughly 19 Earth months) – a period called Venus's synodic period. It takes place as Venus moves from the evening sky into the morning sky. Even though Venus invariably passes very close to the Sun at these times, it rarely passes exactly in front of the Sun's disk.
Venus orbits the Sun in a slightly different plane from the Earth: its orbit is tipped up at an angle of 3.4° relative to Earth's orbit. The diagram below show this inclination of Venus's orbit (not drawn to scale), with a grid representing the plane of the ecliptic – the plane in which the Earth orbits in Sun.
Venus spends much of its time significantly above or below the plane of the Earth's orbit, and at such times it cannot pass directly in front of the Sun. If it passes inferior conjunction at such a time, it will appear to pass to the side of the Sun.
Venus can only pass in front of the Sun if it passes inferior conjunction while it is also very close to the Earth–Sun plane. It crosses through this plane twice on each orbit around the Sun, roughly once every 112 days, at the points on the left and right sides of the diagram above. These points are called the nodes of Venus's orbit.
The nodes of Venus's orbit lie alongside the points along the Earth's orbit that as pass on around June 7 and December 9 each year. Consequently, transits of Venus can only ever occur within a 1–2 days of these two possible dates.
Due to the precession of the equinoxes, these two dates advance through the year at a rate of roughly one day every 100 years.
This requirement for Venus to pass one of the nodes of its orbit at the same time that it also passes inferior conjunction is met on average only once every 75 years, though transits do not occur at regular intervals.
Each time, Venus can be seen to pass in front of the Sun from any location where the Sun is above the horizon at the time.
Further reading
For more information about safely observing the Sun, we recommend Lee Macdonald's excellent book How to Observe the Sun Safely , published by Springer in 2012.
The position of Venus at the moment of closest approach to the centre of the Sun's disk will be:
The coordinates above are given in J2000.0.
Next/previous transits
« Previous | Next » | |||
Visible from the Contiguous United States | Worldwide | Worldwide | Visible from the Contiguous United States | |
23 Nov 0424 | 23 Nov 0424 | Transits of Venus | 24 May 0554 | 26 Nov 0667 |
23 Nov 0424 | 23 Nov 0424 | Transits | 24 May 0554 | 26 Nov 0667 |
The sky on 21 Nov 2024
The sky on 21 November 2024 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
58% 20 days old |
All times shown in EST.
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Warning
Never attempt to point a pair of binoculars or a telescope at an object close to the Sun. Doing so may result in immediate and permanent blindness.
Source
The circumstances of this event were computed using the DE430 planetary ephemeris published by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
This event was automatically generated by searching the ephemeris for planetary alignments which are of interest to amateur astronomers, and the text above was generated based on an estimate of your location.
Related news
26 May 0546 | – Transit of Venus |
23 May 0554 | – Transit of Venus |
Image credit
© NASA/Hinode 2012.