The 2012 June 5-6 transit of Venus (ToV) is over, and there won't be another one till 2117! Many RASC members successfully viewed the ToV here and abroad, and you can find the graphic record of the observations―and of the astronomers making them―here.
Note: all images are copyright of the attributed photographers and graphic artists, and must not be used without prior permission
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Bettina Forget, Montreal Centre
The weather forecast called for rain, but the crowd of over 300 visitors to the RASC Montreal Centre Transit of Venus party got a lucky break. The skies stayed clear for the first contact of Venus’ disc on the solar disc, and all in all we captured about 45 minutes of the transit before the clouds rolled in.
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Roger Vail, Charlottetown Centre
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The skies over Atlantic Canada and New England states were filled with a massive cloud. After squirming in anguish for several days, I told my very understanding partner on the morning of June 4th: "If we are to have any chance to see the transit, we have to leave today and drive north through New Brunswick." "Well," said Beverly, "we'd better start packing." We picked up grandson Darien after school. "Come on," I said, "We're going on a scientific expedition." The 13-year-old lad didn't take long joining up. We crossed the Confederation bridge to New Brunswick and headed northwest. Throughout the day the skies remained cloudy. As evening fell we saw tantalizing bits of brighter sky to the north. It was raining a bit when we pulled up to the hotel late Monday night. We spent the night in Grand Falls and headed north again at around 09:30. We crossed into Quebec in rain and turned left onto route 20 heading west. By noon the skies were clearing ahead of us, and by the time we reached Quebec City it was a sunny afternoon.
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Frank Tomaras, Montreal Centre
Morrie Portnoff, Montreal Centre
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What a great day we had. Almost or more than 300 people came to view this event. CTV News did a live feed for the 6PM news. Most impressive considering the time. This is my first attempt at this type of photography. The telescope is a 5" reflector Sky Watcher on a EQ2. Used a Canon 7D in conjunction with a 25mm eye piece. The site was the Bellevue Observatory (Morgan Arboretium) of the Montreal Branch, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue (Western end of the island of Montreal), Quebec.
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