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Tuesday, June 8, 2004

VATICAN OBSERVATORY HOSTS VIEWING OF VENUS TRANSIT


VATICAN CITY, JUNE 8, 2004 (VIS) - The Vatican Observatory at the papal palace at Castelgandolfo is host this week to 90 professional and advanced amateur astronomers, half of whom observed today's transit of Venus between 7:20 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. from the roof of the palace in this town south of Rome. The guests are part of a group organized by the American astronomy magazine, Sky and Telescope. Another part of the group viewed the transit from a site nearby and will visit the observatory on June 10, according to a communique from the Vatican Specola, or observatory.

  An astronomical "transit" is the passage of one object in the sky in front of another: in this case, Venus passed between Earth and the Sun. Anyone with a small telescope, properly equipped to reduce the Sun's glare, could have viewed the black dot, as Venus appeared, as it moved in front of the Sun. Because this event occurred before sunrise n the western hemisphere, astronomers from Canada and the U.S. came to Europe for the viewing.

  As proper equipment is necessary to observe the transit and the Sun safely, in preparation for today's event, the Specola received a gift of a telescope especially equipped for solar observation from the Coronado Technology Group, presented by the group's president, David Lund, on May 31 to Fr. George Coyne, S.J. director of the observatory.

  The rare transits of Venus happen in pairs, eights years apart, separated by 130 years. Since the invention of the telescope, only five such transits have ever been, the last in 1882. The next will occur in 2012.
.../OBSERVATORY:VENUS TRANSIT/COYNE        VIS 20040608 (280)


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