WEBVTT FILE

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[slate] Well this is a really exciting

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event for us because the transit of Mercury only happens rarely once every

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the last one was 10 years ago. And it happens when Mercury passes

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between us and the sun. It blocks out part of the light from the sun

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Now today this transit is starting at 7:12 a.m.

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East coast time and will end at 2:30 p.m. Again East coast time.

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And you can observe it from the ground if you have the right equipment particularly

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safety equipment. But really the best place to observe it by going to

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the NASA website and watching the live stream data coming from the Solar Dynamics Observatory

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[slate]

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Well astronomers have been using transit data to understand our solar system

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and beyond for literally hundreds of years.

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Originally those transits were used to establish a yard stick

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to measure the sizes of things in our own solar system. But since then

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we've also used transits to understand the atmospheres of the planets in our solar system.

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We've used the transit of Mercury in fact as the first

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test of general relativity. And now we're using transits

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to learn for planets around distant stars. To look for exoplanets.

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[slate]

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Well the sun is fascinating. It's obviously very important to us. And one of the things

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we've discovered over years and years of study is that every time you look at the sun

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in more detail, you find more structure. And in fact

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now the Solar Dynamics Observatory is looking at the sun with

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the best resolution ever. And we're learning more than ever before about

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the magnetic fields of the sun. About flares, about spots

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about the activity that's going on in our own sun. And

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by understanding that we start to understand how the sun can actually

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have an effect on us here on Earth. [slate]

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Well astronomers have been using the transit method

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to find exoplanets for a number of years now. And in fact we've found literally thousands

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of exoplanets so far. But the upcoming TESS mission -the

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Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite - is going to survey the entire sky looking for

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transiting planets around bright, nearby stars

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Now these exoplanets, this list of targets

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is going to be the perfect list of targets for follow up observations

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using telescopes such as the James Webb Space Telescope or other facilities

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to try to get the follow up data to help us understand these planets.

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And that means understanding what they're made out of. Understanding

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what they're atmospheres are like and maybe even finding signs of habitability.

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[slate]

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Well go to www.nasa.gov/transit

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And if you go to that website you will find an array of

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stunning images of the sun and of the transit. And importantly you'll find a link

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to the live stream data coming from the Solar Dynamics Observatory

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as it happens.

