Live: Watching for Venus to Cross the Sun
			
		
		
		
			Today Venus moves in front of the Sun.
One way to 
follow this rare event 
is to actively reload the above live image of the Sun during the 
right time interval 
and look for an unusual circular dark dot.
The smaller sprawling dark areas are 
sunspots.
The circular dot is the planet 
Venus.
The dark dot will only appear during a few very specific hours, 
from about 22:10 on 2012 June 5 through 4:50 2012 June 6, 
Universal 
Time.
This transit is the rarest type of solar eclipse known -- 
much more rare than an eclipse of the Sun by 
the Moon or even by the 
planet Mercury.
In fact, the next transit of Venus across the Sun will be in 2117.
Anyone with a 
clear view of the Sun can go outside and 
carefully view 
the transit for themselves by projecting sunlight through a 
hole in a card 
onto a wall.
Because this 
Venus transit is so unusual and 
visible from so much of the Earth, it is expected to be one of the 
more photographed celestial events in history.
The above live image on the Sun is being taken by the Earth-orbiting 
Solar 
Dynamics Observatory and can be updated about every 15 minutes.
 Editor's note:  Since the transit has ended, the live image was replaced by one taken just before Venus crossed out of Sun.