On Tuesday, August 30, 2022 at 3:14:59 PM UTC+1,
kellehe...@gmail.com wrote:
Next month, the obverse spectacle to the one in 2013 will occur-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2uCtot1aDg
Mercury is further away from the slower moving Earth in retrograde motion and also it is smaller than Venus, hence it will be barely noticeable against the change in position of the stars and especially as it approach the closest point in our mutual
orbits.
Venus will be quite bright, but as it is much further away from the Earth when on the opposite side of the solar system, the nearer Mercury will also appear bright when it arrives at that position in October.
Mercury is currently passing between the slower moving Earth and the stationary Sun as the satellite peers towards the inner solar system-
https://sol24.net/data/html/SOHO/C3/96H/VIDEO/
Unlike a stationary field of background stars, the change in the position of the stars relative to the central foreground Sun is in response to the Earth's orbital motion. As Mercury moves faster, its motion can easily be spotted insofar as the
background stars move in unison from left to right while Mercury is set off as a faster change from left to right when in retrograde motion.
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