A Rare Annular Venusian Solar Eclipse
Credit & Copyright:
Peter Lawrence
An unusual type of solar eclipse occurred last week.
Usually it is the
Earth's Moon that
eclipses
the Sun.
Last week, for the first time in over 100 years, the planet
Venus took a turn.
Like a solar eclipse by the Moon, the phase of Venus became a continually thinner
crescent as Venus became increasingly
better aligned with the Sun.
Eventually the alignment became perfect and the
phase of Venus dropped to zero.
The dark spot of Venus crossed our parent star.
The situation could technically be labeled a Venusian
annular eclipse with an extraordinarily large
ring of fire.
From above the
thick cloud tops of Venus,
the Earth appeared in its fullest phase, brighter in the
Venusian sky than even
Mars appeared from Earth last August.
Hours later, as Venus continued in its orbit,
a slight crescent phase appeared again.
The next Venusian solar eclipse will occur in 2012.