Transit of Venus App Enables Cosmic Calculations

A built-in timer allows users to calculate the length of the planet's shadow on the solar disk to reproduce an experiment done in the 19th century with less precise instruments















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Image: VenusTransit

On June 5-6, amateur and professional astronomers alike will be treated to a very rare celestial event: the trek of the planet Venus across the sun. Of course, there’s an app for that.

Called VenusTransit and available on both the iOS (iPhone) and Android platforms, the app recreates a centuries-old experiment that was used to help calculate the size of the solar system, specifically the Earth’s distance from the sun.

The transit of Venus across the sun is one of the rarest celestial events ever witnessed in human history. Only six Venus transits have been observed in the last 400 years, and if you miss this one, you're out of luck. The next transit of Venus occurs in the year 2117.

That's where the VenusTransit app comes in.

The skywatcher society Astronomers Without Borders and Dutch schoolteacher Steven van Roode are behind the app. Users of VenusTransit are asked to use a built-in timer within the app to calculate the length of the “ingress,” or entrance, of Venus' shadow onto the solar disk, and the “egress,” or departure, of Venus’s shadow from the face of the sun. [NASA Launches App Competition]

The app combines that info with location data from the phone itself and sends it to a central server. The app’s creators hope to see whether the data gleaned from amateur astronomers can be as accurate as those of 18th and 19th century stargazers who did the same experiment with far less precise instruments.

Astronomers who watched the 1874 and 1882 transits were able to determine the distance from the Earth to the sun to within 1 percent of its actual value.

VenusTransit has three sections: a timer, a simulator and a visibility section, which tells you when the Venus transit should occur in your location.

If you would like to participate, be sure to read this description of the app and familiarize yourself with the methods of timing the transit. From there, use the simulator to practice timing both the ingress and egress, and compare your times to the correct time to gauge your accuracy. (Note that the app has locked out the timer portion until the time of the actual transit to prevent bogus entries.)

Following the transit, data collected will be posted to an interactive map on the Astronomers Without Borders website. Roode says he hopes the site will become a “time capsule” for future descendants to look back on the events of the Venus transits of the 21st century.

Copyright 2012 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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  1. 1. BillW 03:19 PM 6/5/12

    RE: Transit of Venus app.

    OK, we know what you mean, but to say "...entrance of Venus' shadow onto the solar disk.." is certainly not correct. We are seeing the planet Venus itself, not the "shadow" of Venus. Can you imagine anything casting a shadow upon the surface of the sun?

    Bill Wells
    Olympia WA

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  2. 2. Xplorer 02:17 AM 6/8/12

    What Bill Wells says is precisely the point. The Sun is the cause of shadow - in the solar system - at least as far as visible light goes. If at all, the shadow of Venus would fall towards Earth. It would be interesting to find out if, during the TOV, anything between the Venus and the Earth, say any man made space probe or any Earth approaching asteroid etc., entered the shadow cone of Venus. What such observations/opportunities would bring out? How long would be the cone of the Shadow and the geometry of its umbral and penumbral regions?

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