When was the last time Venus did a transit?

6 June 2012
The last transit of Venus was on 5 and 6 June 2012, and was the last Venus transit of the 21st century; the prior transit took place on 8 June 2004. The previous pair of transits were in December 1874 and December 1882. The next transits of Venus will take place on 10–11 December 2117 and 8 December 2125.

How often does the transit of Venus occur?

every 80 years
On average, Transits of Venus happens every 80 years or so. However, this average figure is very misleading, because transits occur in a ‘pair of pairs’ pattern that repeats every 243 years. First, two transits take place in December (around Dec 8th), 8 years apart.

How rare is a Venus transit?

Transits of Venus are so rare because the planet’s orbit is tilted just over three degrees from the plane of the solar system. This means that most of the time Venus passes above or below the sun’s disk, as seen from Earth. On average, we see four transits of Venus within 243 years.

How often does Venus see the Sun?

about every 584 days
Similarly, we don’t see a transit of Venus every time Venus is between Earth and the Sun—which happens about every 584 days or 1.6 years.

When is the transit of Venus in 2012?

The Transit of Venus on 5-6 June 2012 is a rare event, and is made even more special because of the other astrological events with this Venus transit. We only get two transits of Venus about every 120 years, and they comes in pairs at eight years apart.

How often does Venus transit between the Sun and Earth?

Venus transits occur when Venus reaches a point in its orbit that brings the planet directly between the Earth and the sun. Since the tilt of Venus’ orbit isn’t exactly the same as that of Earth, the events are rare, occurring just four times every 243 years. Skywatcher Tim McCord caught the Venus transit on June 5, 2012, in Entiat, WA.

Where can you see the transit of Venus?

In North America, the Caribbean, and northwestern South America, the beginning of the transit was visible on 5 June until sunset. From sunrise on 6 June, the end of the transit was visible from South Asia, the Middle East, east Africa, and most of Europe.

When was the last time Venus crossed the Sun?

The transit of Venus across the sun is one of the rarest celestial sights visible from Earth, one that wowed scientists and amateur observers around the world Tuesday (June 5). The event, arguably the most anticipated skywatching display of the year, marked the last time Venus will cross the sun (as seen from Earth) for 105 years.