Transit of Mercury November 8, 2006 Press release (National Media) From Jay Pasachoff of Williams College
(Williamstown, Massachusetts) and Glenn Schneider of the Steward Observatory of
the University of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona) When Mercury goes in front of the Sun on Wednesday,
a rare event, scientists from Williams College and the University of Arizona
will be observing it from vantage points on earthbound mountains and with
orbiting spacecraft. Jay Pasachoff of Williams College (Williamstown,
Massachusetts) and Glenn Schneider of the Steward Observatory of the University
of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona) will be perched at the University of Hawaii's solar
observatory, at the rim of the giant Haleakala crater at an altitude of 10,000
feet on the island of Maui. (The crater is wider than Manhattan island and
deeper than Manhattan's tall skyscrapers.) Separately, Williams College's
Bryce Babcock and solar astronomer Kevin Reardon from the Arcetri Observatory in
Florence, Italy, will observe the transit from the Sacramento Peak Observatory
in Sunspot, New Mexico. Pasachoff and Schneider are already experts on such
events, which are known as transits. Among planets, only Mercury and Venus
can go in transit across the face of the Sun, as seen from the Earth, since they
are the only planets whose orbits are inside that of Earth's. Pasachoff
and Schneider have already used the 1999 transit of Mercury to unravel a
centuries-old mystery known as the black-drop effect. (Their analysis was
published in the journal Icarus and in
the proceedings of an International Astronomical Union symposium on the transit
of Venus.) This blurring of the
distinction between a planet's silhouette and the edge of the Sun prevented
accurate knowledge of the size of the solar system for hundreds of years.
It had been seen at the very rare transits of Venus, which occur in pairs
separated by over a century, and often falsely attributed to Venus's atmosphere.
Pasachoff and Schneider, on the other hand, by observing and explaining a
black-drop effect at a transit of Mercury observed from NASA's TRACE spacecraft,
showed that no atmosphere was necessary, since Mercury's atmosphere is
negligible and the spacecraft was outside Earth's atmosphere. Transits of Mercury occur a dozen times a century,
most recently in 2003. The next won't occur until 2016. So a small
coterie of scientists interested in the Sun or in the solar system are making
careful observations at the 2006 opportunity. Pasachoff and Schneider, in
Hawaii, will work with University of Hawaii scientists Jeff Kuhn, Don Mickey,
and Garry Nitta to observe Mercury's stately progress silhouetted against the
Sun for approximately 5 hours, from 9 am to just after 2 pm local time (2 pm to
sunset Eastern Standard Time). The whole transit, from beginning to end,
will be visible in Hawaii, while only the first half of the transit will be
visible from the eastern United States, the Sun setting with Mercury's disk
still appearing on it. Pasachoff and Schneider and their University of
Hawaii Institute for Astronomy colleagues will use the Imaging Vector
Magnetograph instrument on the telescope in the Mees Solar Observatory in a
spectral-scanning mode in an attempt to measure the sodium component of
Mercury's extremely tenuous "atmosphere," measure its height, and
determine how it varies from Mercury's pole to its equator.
They will additionally use the polarimetry capability of the instrument
to try to detect the weak Mercurian magnetic field against that of the Sun. Pasachoff and Schneider extended their interest in
transits to the 2004 transit of Venus, the first to be visible from Earth since
1882. They teamed up with Richard Willson of Columbia University, whose
NASA satellite ACRIMSAT is able to measure the total amount of energy from the
Sun that reaches Earth. They were able to measure a decrease of a tenth of
one percent in the radiation from the Sun because of Venus's blocking the Sun's
disk. (They reported their results in the April 10, 2006, issue of the Astrophysical
Journal.) The event provides a close analogy in our solar system for
transits increasingly found for planets around other stars. NASA's Kepler
spacecraft, to be launched in 2008, should discover hundreds of planets around
other stars with this transit technique. Whether Pasachoff, Schneider, and
Willson manage to detect Mercury's silhouette in the total solar radiation is
marginal, since Mercury's silhouette is only 1/25th the area of Venus's. Williams College scientist Bryce Babcock will work
with Kevin Reardon of Italy's Arcetri Observatory (Reardon is a Williams College
alumnus) at the Sacramento Peak Observatory in Sunspot, New Mexico, part of the
U.S. National Solar Observatory. From their 9200-foot altitude, they will
use the transit of Mercury observed at the Dunn Solar Telescope there to measure
the true sizes of the smallest features visible in the solar atmosphere.
The availability of Mercury's sequentially blocking small features on the Sun
from its position outside the Earth's atmosphere will make such observations
possible. They will use camera systems obtained with a grant from NASA for
Pasachoff and Babcock's studies of Pluto and other solar-system objects. Reardon and Babcock will use a special instrument
known as IBIS, constructed at the Institute in Florence and installed at the
Dunn Solar Telescope, to construct a detailed map of the sodium atmosphere of
Mercury. This experiment is led by Andrew Potter, currently a visitor at
the National Optical Astronomy Observatories. The team in New Mexico, as
well as Pasachoff and Schneider's team and Kuhn's team in Hawaii, will try to
detect the spectrum of sodium in Mercury's atmosphere as it passes in front of
the Sun. Pasachoff and Schneider are working with scientists
at Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory and at the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, especially Leon Golub and Edward
Deluca at the latter, to use not only NASA's 8-year-old Transition Region and
Coronal Explorer (TRACE) spacecraft, which they had used previously, but also
the new Hinode spacecraft, launched by the Japanese space agency on September
22, 2006, carrying telescopes from their Lockheed Martin and Harvard-Smithsonian
collaborators. Pasachoff's research about planetary transits is
supported by a grant from the Committee on Research and Exploration of the
National Geographic Society. He will be joined on Maui by Williams
undergraduate Suranjit Tilakawardane, a student fron Sri Lanka who is a senior
astronomy major. From the ground, the transit of Mercury will not be
as visible as 2004's transit of Venus, since Mercury's disk will be too small to
be seen without use of a telescope or binoculars. But the Sun is so bright
that your eyes can be hurt if you look at it without special solar filters.
So only people with access to solar filters or specially filtered telescopes, or
who project the solar image onto a wall without looking through the telescope,
will be able to see the November 8 event. The whole transit from beginning
to end will be visible in Hawaii and in the extreme western United States.
From New Mexico eastward to the Atlantic, the sun will set with Mercury's disk
still silhouetted against it. ___ contact information: Jay M. Pasachoff Field Memorial Professor of Astronomy Director, Hopkins Observatory Williams College 33 Lab Campus Drive Williamstown, MA 01267-2565 413 597 2105; fax 413 597 3200 jay.m.pasachoff@williams.edu Contact information for Schneider: Glenn Schneider Associate
Astronomer & Hubble NICMOS Project Instrument Scientist Steward
Observatory * Phone:
520-621-5865 fax: 520-621-1891 Dept. of Astronomy
* email: gschneider@as.arizona.edu 933 N. Cherry
Avenue* University of
Arizona * World Wide Web Information Server (Home Page URL): Tucson, Arizona 85721 *
http://nicmosis.as.arizona.edu:8000 Pasachoff Website on transits of Venus and Mercury:
http://www.transitofvenus.info NASA site from Fred Espenak with a visibility map
and table: http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/OH/transit06.html See also a Website from Chuck Bueter at http://www.transitofvenus.org/mercury.htm Information about safe
observation while looking toward the Sun, using suitable filters or projection
methods, is available from the site of the International Astronomical Union's
Working Group at Eclipses (Pasachoff is Chair) at www.eclipses.info
and www.transitofvenus.org/safety.htm. Schneider Websites on transit
observations: http://nicmosis.as.arizona.edu:8000/ECLIPSE_WEB/TRANSIT_04/TRACE/TOV_TRACE.html
http://nicmosis.as.arizona.edu:8000/ECLIPSE_WEB/TRANSIT_04/ACRIMSAT/ACRIMSAT_TOV.html
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