Mercury Transit of the Sun
The planet Mercury is visible passing between the Sun and the TRACE spacecraft. Data collected on May 7, 2003, from 04:32:04 to 08:08:57.
The dark spot is Mercury, just as it passes over the solar disk.
Mercury continues its motion across the disk.
and keeps moving along.
Still going...
Video slate image reads "Mercury transit of the Sun
The planet Mercury is visible passing between the Sun and the TRACE spacecraft".
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Scientific Visualization Studio, Sam Freeland (LMSAL), Dawn Myers (GSFC), Carolus J. Schrijver (LMSAL)
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Animator
- Tom Bridgman (Global Science and Technology, Inc.)
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Scientist
- Neal Hurlburt (LMSAL)
Release date
This page was originally published on Wednesday, May 7, 2003.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:57 PM EDT.
Series
This page can be found in the following series:Datasets used
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[TRACE]
ID: 106The TRACE satellite views the Sun at ultraviolet wavelengths with high temporal (approximately 1-12 seconds) and spatial (1 arcsecond per pixel) resolution. Launched on April 2, 1998, it orbits the Earth in a Sun-synchronous orbit.
This dataset can be found at: http://sunland.gsfc.nasa.gov/smex/trace/
See all pages that use this dataset
Note: While we identify the data sets used on this page, we do not store any further details, nor the data sets themselves on our site.