Astronomical phenomenon of Lunar Occultation of Venus
The lunar occultation of Venus refers to a natural phenomenon in which the Moon passes in front of Venus, obstructing it from view on some regions of the Earth. Since the orbital planes of both the moon and Venus are tilted relative to the ecliptic, occultations only happen about twice a year rather than once a month. A computer search predicts that 101 lunar occultations occur in the date range of 1995–2045.[1]
Occultations can occur at any value of the moon's argument of latitude, not just near its nodes, because Venus goes further north and south of the ecliptic than the moon does. In 2054 for example there are five occultations at intervals of just one month (January through May), and the first two are when Venus is more than 5.1° north of the ecliptic.[2]
Whether there is an occultation depends on whether the distance of the centre of the moon is greater or less than 8093 kilometres (the sum of the earth's polar radius and the moon's radius) away from the line connecting the centre of the earth to Venus. The angle between the lines from the centre of the earth to the centres of the moon and Venus will then be the arc sine of 8093 km divided by the distance to the moon. Since this distance can vary in the range of 356,400 to 406,700 kilometres, there will always be an occultation (of the centre of Venus) if the said angle is less than 1.14° and there will never be one if the angle is more than 1.30°. Venus itself can have an angular radius up to nearly 0.01°, which needs to be taken into account when determining whether all of Venus will be hidden. This is similar to considerations of gamma for solar eclipses.
For years up to 2025, a website giving easily observable occultations for the year is available.[3]
Observations
Year
Observation
−124
A Babylonian scribe reported observing Venus disappear behind the Moon on 4 September 125 BC. However, this report is considered unreliable as the occultation supposedly occurred an hour and 20 minutes after sunrise and the report does not agree well with ΔT determinations at similar times in the past.[4]
63
The eclipse on 5 November 63 as viewed from Rome may be referenced in the Book of Revelation.[5]
503
The Chinese Book of Wei records the lunar occultation of Venus on 5 August 503.[6]
554
Medieval sources in Metz record a lunar occultation of Venus at around this time. The most likely date was 9 October 554.[7]
1476
Castilian astronomer Abraham Zacuto made a detailed report of a lunar occultation of Venus on 24 July 1476.[8]
1529
Renaissance polymath Nicolaus Copernicus observed the Moon occult Venus on 12 March 1529, and he used this and records of occultations from antiquity to deduce the motion of Venus.[9]
1757
A near simultaneous occultation of Mars and Venus occurred 18 March 1757. The two planets had an angular separation of 25′.[10]
1923
On 13 January 1923, a lunar occultation of Venus was photographed from the United States.[11]
1980
From the British Isles on 5 October 1980, a rare lunar eclipse sequence of Venus and the star Regulus was viewed by multiple observers.[12]
1998
On 23 April 1998, there was a near simultaneous lunar occultation of Venus and Jupiter. However, most of the event was only observable from the South Atlantic ocean.[10]
2007
The Venus Express spacecraft was in orbit around Venus when a lunar occultation was observed on 18 July 2007. Scientists used the radio transmissions to measure the electron density in the Moon's ionosphere.[13]
2015
On the 7 December 2015, the lunar occultation of Venus was observed by astronomers in Texas.[14] Similarly, Joel Kowsky, the astronomer of NASA recorded the lunar occultation of Venus the same day from Washington, D.C. The lunar occultation of Venus on this date was the second lunar occultation of the Venus in the same year.[15]
2020
Venus was eclipsed by the Moon at 19 June 2020 from 9:44:15 - 10:46:12 PM (UTC+2).[16][17]
2021
In the year 2021, Venus was occultated on 8 November.[18] The occultation was observed from the Eastern part of Asia.[19]
2023
On 24 March 2023, there was a lunar occultation viewed from Taiwan.[20]
On 9 November 2023, there was a lunar occultation observed from Europe.[21][22][23]
2053
A near simultaneous lunar occultation of Venus and Uranus is predicted for 16 August 2053.[10]
^Sôma, Mitsuru; Tanikawa, Kiyotaka (April 2016). "Earth rotation derived from occultation records". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 68 (2). id. 29. Bibcode:2016PASJ...68...29S. doi:10.1093/pasj/psw020.
^Goldstein, Bernard R.; Chabás, José (1999). "An Occultation of Venus Observed by Abraham Zacut in 1476". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 30 (3). doi:10.1177/0021828699030003 (inactive 2024-11-03).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
^ abcWatson, M. S. F. (August 1994). "Simultaneous Lunar Occultations of Two Planets". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 88 (4): 213. Bibcode:1994JRASC..88..213W.
^Boss, Lewis J.; et al. (1923). "Occultation of Venus January 13, 1923". Popular Astronomy. 31: 148. Bibcode:1923PA.....31..148B.
^Amery, G. W. (April 1982). "The Lunar Occultation of Venus, 1980 October 5". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 92 (3): 132–134. Bibcode:1982JBAA...92..132A.