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Hawaii will miss Mercury’s pass in front of sun

NASA VIA AP
                                In this composite image provided by NASA, the planet Mercury passed directly between the sun and Earth on May 9, 2016, in a transit that lasted 7-1/2 hours. On Monday, Mercury will make another transit, visible from the eastern U.S. and Canada, and all of Central and South America. It will be too dark to see the event in Hawaii.
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NASA VIA AP

In this composite image provided by NASA, the planet Mercury passed directly between the sun and Earth on May 9, 2016, in a transit that lasted 7-1/2 hours. On Monday, Mercury will make another transit, visible from the eastern U.S. and Canada, and all of Central and South America. It will be too dark to see the event in Hawaii.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. >> Mercury is putting on a rare celestial show next week, parading across the sun in view of most of the world.

Hawaii likely will miss it, Tony Smith, planetarium supervisor at the Bishop Museum, said Friday.

The solar system’s smallest, innermost planet will resemble a tiny black dot Monday as it passes directly between Earth and the sun. It begins at 7:35 a.m. EST, which will be 2:35 a.m. — well before sunrise — in Hawaii.

The entire 5 ½-hour event will be visible, weather permitting, in the eastern U.S. and Canada, and all of Central and South America. The rest of North America, Europe and Africa will catch part of the action. Asia and Australia will miss out.

“The chances are not good for us, because it will be so low on the horizon,” Smith said by telephone. “And it’s almost always cloudy on the horizon early in the morning.”

In any case, people are not encouraged to go out and stare at the sun, risking eye damage. Special filters are needed to see the transit clearly, Smith said.

“The best option is to find some live webstream, like NASA,” he said.

NASA will broadcast the transit as seen from the orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory, with only a brief lag. Scientists will use the transit to fine-tune telescopes, especially those in space that cannot be adjusted by hand, according to NASA solar astrophysicist Alex Young.

Unlike its 2016 transit, Mercury will score a near bull’s-eye this time, passing practically dead center in front of our star.

Mercury’s next transit isn’t until 2032, and North America won’t get another viewing opportunity until 2049. Earthlings get treated to just 13 or 14 Mercury transits a century.

You’ll need proper eye protection for Monday’s spectacle: Telescopes or binoculars with solar filters are recommended. There’s no harm in pulling out the eclipse glasses from the total solar eclipse across the U.S. two years ago, but it would take “exceptional vision” to spot minuscule Mercury, said Young.

Mercury is 3,000 miles in diameter, compared with the sun’s 864,000 miles.

During its 2012 transit of the sun, larger and closer Venus was barely detectable by Young with his solar-viewing glasses.

“That’s really close to the limit of what you can see,” he said earlier this week. “So Mercury’s going to probably be too small.”

Venus transits are much rarer. The next one isn’t until 2117.

Mercury will cut a diagonal path left to right across the sun on Monday, entering at bottom left (around the 8-hour mark on a clock) and exiting top right (around the 2-hour mark).

Although the trek will appear slow, Mercury will zoom across the sun at roughly 150,000 mph.


Star-Advertiser staff contributed to this report.


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