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Rarest transit of Mercury to take place on May 9

On May 9 there will be a rare transit of Mercury, when the smallest planet in our Solar System will pass directly between the Earth and the Sun after 10 years and was visible three times in a century. The last time this happened was in 2006, and the next two occasions will be in 2019 and 2032.

During the transit, which takes place in the afternoon and early evening in the UK, Mercury will appear as a dark silhouetted disk against the bright surface of the Sun.

Pakistani star grazers will observe the rarest scene at 4:15 in the evening while the entire event is visible from most of Western Europe, the western part of North and West Africa, the eastern part of North America and most of South America. Most of the transit (either ending with sunset or starting at sunrise) will be visible from the rest of North and South America, the eastern half of the Pacific, the rest of Africa and most of Asia. Observers in eastern Asia, south-eastern Asia and Australasia will not be able to see the transit.
Mercury completes each orbit around the Sun every 88 days, and passes between the Earth and Sun every 116 days.