Transit of Venus 2

  

The Transit of Venus Party June 8, 2004

The sight of Venus crossing the face of the sun is a big thrill for all amateur astronomers. Transits of Venus are the rarest of all predictable astronomical phenomena and currently occur in a pattern that repeats every 243 years, with pairs of transits eight years apart separated by long gaps of 121.5 years and 105.5 years.

CAUTION: In all of the examples here, very heavy filters were in place in front of the objectives lenses of the telescopes.

NEVER LOOK DIRECTLY AT THE SUN, PARTICULARLY WITH BINOCULARS OR TELESCOPES

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  (above) The preliminary discussions. Dan G, past president of BCAS in orange.  
   
  (above) John H, left and Richard J, right, both past presidents of BCAS set up for the big show.  
   
  (above) John H. bagged this picture. Pretty nice for a guy sitting on a dock on Georgian Bay!!  
   
  (above) John H's setup to get the above picture  
   
  Richard J. poses with his 'Road Kill' Dobsonian.  

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