Categories: Uncategorized

Venus journeys across the Sun today, VenusTransit App will help you record it

For the last time in 105 years, viewers around the world can see Venus transverse the sun. A new app called VenusTransit helps viewers record this “last such opportunity in our lifetimes.”

One of the rarest celestial events viewable from Earth – the planet Venus will make a trek across the sun. Having only been observed six previous times in history and without another occurrence until 2117, some space buffs are gearing up for the big show.

One way to stay tuned and also help scientists record Venus’ voyage is by using an app called VenusTransit. With this app, which is available on Android and iOS, amateur astronomers can join the ranks of former explorers like Capt. James Cook along with current NASA scientists.

“In centuries past, explorers traveled around the globe to time the transit of Venus to determine the size of the solar system,” Steven van Roode, who helped conceive of the app, wrote in the description of VenusTransit. “The phone app will allow citizens around the world to witness this rare phenomenon and to contribute their observation to a collective experiment to measure the sun’s distance. This will literally be the last such opportunity in your lifetime.”

The app comes with a built-in timer to calculate how long Venus takes to cross the Sun, beginning with “ingress” — just as the little black dot starts its trek — and ending with “egress” at the tail end of the crossing. It also has simulation and visibility sections to tell users when the transit will begin based on their GPS coordinates.

“The timing favors observers in the mid-Pacific where the sun is high overhead during the crossing,” NASA Science’s Tony Phillips wrote in a blog post. “In the USA, the transit will at its best around sunset. That’s good, too. Creative photographers will have a field day imaging the swollen red sun ‘punctured’ by the circular disk of Venus.”

The importance of Venus’ transit has been a topic of discussion for astronomers for centuries, because it has helped them estimate the distance between the Earth and the Sun, while also allowing them to figure out the relative size of the solar system.

position=left

Source: CNET

Credit: NASA Science

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

The death of paper records: Will AI-driven EHRs eliminate medical errors?

Patient records have long been a collection of handwritten notes, prescription slips, and test results,…

7 hours ago

The future of contactless hospitality: Balancing convenience with personalization

The fast pace development of the hospitality industry will result in contactless technology adoption, where…

2 days ago

AI & automation in Indian digital marketing: A game-changer for ROI

In the ever-evolving world of digital marketing, a powerful shift is quietly transforming the way…

3 days ago

Open Innovation Thrives on Chaos Collaboration and Unexpected Creativity

Philosophical at its core, open innovation is a socio-economic movement synonymous with globalization and decentralization…

3 days ago

Striking a balance between digital independence & online safety for kids

Parenting is never an easy task. Ask any parent today about the biggest challenge, and…

4 days ago

Why everything is a subscription now & what it means for your wallet

In the last decade, purchasing and accessing products and services have undergone a radical transformation.…

1 week ago