The Transit of Venus was reminder of what a tiny speck of rock we live upon. A third of the way closer to the Sun than we are, our sister speck is only slightly smaller than the Earth.
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This wondrous once in a life-time event took place yesterday.
On June 5 2012, SDO collected images of the rarest predictable solar event–the transit of Venus across the face of the sun. Â This event happens in pairs eight years apart that are separated from each other by 105 or 121 years. Â The last transit was in 2004 and the next will not happen until 2117.
The videos and images displayed here are constructed from several wavelengths of extreme ultraviolet light and a portion of the visible spectrum. Â The red colored sun is the 304 angstrom ultraviolet, the golden colored sun is 171 angstrom, the magenta sun is 1700 angstrom, and the orange sun is filtered visible light. Â 304 and 171 show the atmosphere of the sun, which does not appear in the visible part of the spectrum.