Little Mercury a black dot as it crosses vast face of sun

Ray Bertucci of Gardnerville sent in this photo saying "Mercury is the small round dot at the 9 o'clock spot on the left side of the sun." He said the other spot, at 4 o'clock is a sun spot. He advised never to look at the sun without a solar filter. For more information, see page A7.

Ray Bertucci of Gardnerville sent in this photo saying "Mercury is the small round dot at the 9 o'clock spot on the left side of the sun." He said the other spot, at 4 o'clock is a sun spot. He advised never to look at the sun without a solar filter. For more information, see page A7.

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Ray Bertucci of Gardnerville sent in this photo saying “Mercury is the small round dot at the 9 o’clock spot on the left side of the sun.” He said the other spot, at 4 o’clock is a sun spot. He advised never to look at the sun without a solar filter.

By The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — For the first time in 10 years, Mercury passed directly between the Earth and sun on Monday, resembling a black dot against the vast, glowing face of our star.

Many stargazers turned to the Internet as NASA provided close-to-real-time images of the 7½-hour trek, courtesy of the Solar Dynamics Observatory.

Although the solar system’s small, innermost planet appeared to be trudging along, it actually was zooming past the sun at 106,000 mph.

The cosmic show — which began at 4:12 a.m. — was visible from the eastern U.S. and Canada, as well as Western Europe, western Africa and most of South America. Those places were privy to the entire event. The audience grew as the sun rose across North America, revealing Mercury’s relatively rare transit.

A transit of Mercury occurs only about 13 times a century. The next transit of Mercury won’t occur until 2019. Then it won’t happen again until 2032.

“What happens during a transit is really all about perspective,” said Jim Green, director of NASA’s planetary science division who viewed his first transit of Mercury 46 years ago.

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