Video & New Media
Links: Video & New Media
Links: Video & New Media

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=wall&gid=108400462513165
Transit of Venus Group features dialogue and links on Facebook.
VenusTransit on YouTube lists videos related to the transit of Venus. Featured video is a four-minute trailer, below, available as full-dome video for digital theaters and planetariums.
Transit of Venus Project Blog, from Steven van Roode.
@tov2012 is the Twitter account that steers you to transit-related content; maintained by Steven van Roode
Transit of Venus multmedia from NASA Sun-Earth Day.
http://vimeo.com/channels/ourlasttransitofvenus
our last Transit of Venus, multiple videos from Outreach Europlanet.
http://www.youtube.com/user/UTSIC/videos
Videos from all talks at Transit of Venus 2012 Symposium at University of Toronto, 28 April 2012.
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL420FA63E0D3D1393&feature=plcp
NASA Sun-Earth Day collection of transit of Venus videos.
Kepler mission provides excellent animations of Science Concepts, Artist Concepts, and Types of Worlds.
NASA Year of the Solar System Educational Resources offer data, downloadable products, images, video, podcasts, animations, interactives, and networks.
Our Last Transit of Venus is a documentary highlighting three groups: "scientists who will observe the Transit to study Venus and exoplanets, amateurs and students who will redo the experiment of determining the size of the Solar System and profession and/or amateur historians with the intention to observe the Transit with 18th and 19th century instruments."
Non-linear images and text introduce the chronology of Transit of Venus events; limited text in this version, so you can narrate while presenting and move around or skip sections at will. Best viewed in full screen; see Prezi website for tips if you are projecting this presentation. Transit of Venus is my inaugural effort on Prezi.
http://prezi.com/9r9blzqx_tep/transit-of-venus-image-blast/ Transit of Venus Image Blast is a compilation of many images that are almost all my own copyright or public domain, such as NASA content. Requires a while to download fully. Images may be used freely for educational purposes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Transit_of_Venus_animation.ogg#globalusageNASA animation zooms out from the surface of Venus to beyond earth's orbit, showing a transit of Venus.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4QtZFkDpemY&feature=player_embeddedNASA SDO animation shows the Solar Dynamics Observatory aligned to witness the 2012 transit of Venus. A higher-res version is available for free download from VenusTransit_2012158.wmv
UNESCO -17- Science and Illustration: The Transit of Venus is a high-quality production that chronicles the challenging 18th century expeditions of Chappe, Hell, Cook and others. Video conveys the confluence of factors in the Age of Enlightenment that propelled the global quest to determine the size of the solar system; 46 minutes.
http://365daysofastronomy.org/2009/12/05/december-5th-the-celestial-alignment-of-2012/"Celestial Alignment of 2012" is featured on the 365 Days of Astronomy podcast for December 5, 2009; by Chuck Bueter.
http://365daysofastronomy.org/2011/06/05/june-5th-transit-of-venus/Astronomer Jay Pasachoff reflects on past transits of Venus while anticipating the 2012 event and the science to be gleaned from it.
http://natwaddell.posterous.com/tag/transitofvenus
Transit of Venus blog by Nat Waddell
TRACE spacecraft is the only satellite to observe the 2004 transit of Venus in visible. Among this collection of videos is one showing the "black drop" effect. TRACE scientists describe this as the "consequence of the telescope point-spread function and, more interestingly, the light-scattering properties of the atmosphere of Venus."
In images from the GOES spacecraft's Solar X-Ray Imager (SXI), Venus appears as a dark disk about 1/30th the Sun’s apparent diameter. Since the Sun’s corona extends well above the disk, Venus was visible in silhouette for approximately 9 hours, versus the 6 hours seen from Earth. Video SXI_SPECIAL_20040608_VENUS_09H.MPG (1.9 MB MPEG-1, 7 sec.) from NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9e8kVXKOCTE
Launchpad: Transits by invites you to "discover how scientists used the last Venus transit and a geometric technique called parallax to verify the distance between sun and Earth. Find out what scientists hope to learn the next time Venus makes a shadow on the face of the sun." From NASA eClips.
Penn High School Orchestra performs John Philip Sousa's Transit of Venus March in 2004.
http://3dsun.org/Free app for iPhone and iTouch gives daily updates on solar activity with images and text courtesy of Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO). Available for free download at the iTunes App Store at http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/3d-sun/id347089078.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VbRPlm6aAs
NASA Connect segment that explains the Venus Transit and compares it to a solar eclipse.
http://www.venus-transit.de/
User- adjustable Applets about the transit of Venus; by Jürgen Giesen; (available in English and German)..
- Transit Observer
- The Phases of Mercury and Venus
- Planetary Motion of Mercury, Venus and Mars
- Geocentric Motion
- Transit Motion
Jules Janssen uses "photographic revolver" to capture series of images for 1874 transit of Venus. German text at http://kuffner-sternwarte.at/2004/Venustransit/1874.html. Note: Though Janssen did use his device for the 1874 event, this extant series of images may have been from a simulated transit as part of a test by Janssen. http://adsbit.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?journal=MNRAS&year=1874&volume=..
34&letter=.&db_key=AST&page_ind=350&plate_select=NO&data_type=GIF&type=SCREEN_GIF
The design of Janssen's "photographic revolver" is illustrated and described; from NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS). There are two articles, one after the other, as noted by Peter Abrahams:
- De la Rue, Warren. On a Piece of Apparatus for carrying out M. Janssen's Method of Time-Photographic Observations of the Transit of Venus. M.N.R.A.S. 34 (May 1874) 347-353.
- Capello, J. On an Apparatus Designed for the Photographic Record of the Transit of Venus. M.N.R.A.S. 34 (May 1874) 354-356 (translation of letter to De la Rue.
http://vt-2004.solarphysics.kva.se/movies/
Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope on La Palma; images and movies include black drop effect and the "elusive aureole outlining the disk of Venus. It is caused by sunlight being refracted towards us in the atmosphere of the planet."

http://vestige.lmsal.com/TRACE/transits/venus_2004/
From the perspective of the TRACE spacecraft, including movies with time codes.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBxq4IxzJFE
Explaining the Transit of Venus on a children's television show called 'Totally Wild', with emphasis on James Cook's effort.
http://www.wnit.org/outdoorelements/1000/1003/1003.html
Planetarium director Ruth Craft uses a photometer and orrery to simulate the Kepler spacecraft monitoring a star with transiting planets. In the demonstration, computer software generates a light curve that is projected on the domed ceiling, where visitors can discern the presence and characteristics of companion planets. See How the Kepler Telescope Works (Segment #3 of Episode #1003); from WNIT Outdoor Elements.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaihjCw76vc
Using Parallax Angle of Venus to Measure Distance to Sun. Video shows how two observers at different locations on earth see two distinct chords across the sun. The angular distance divided by two is the parallax angle of Venus, which can mathematically yield the distance from earth to the sun.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gm_kZd_wGkE&feature=player_embedded
Black Drop Effect Simulated With Pinched Fingers. Simulate the black drop effect that is sometimes seen during a transit of Venus by nearly pinching your fingers together. Note the ligament that seems to form just between them just before they seem to touch.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qS1O6C2dQ40
A crowd gathered before sunrise on June 8, 2004, to witness the rare Transit of Venus in Mishawaka, Indiana, USA. Though clouds threatened to obscure the spectacle, the sun emerged in time for the audience to observe through telescopes, rear projection screens, and solar viewers. An audible time signal in the background allowed individuals to time the instant when the black dot of Venus just touched the inside edge of the sun, as global expeditions had done in past centuries. The last transit of Venus in our lifetimes occurs June 5-6, 2012.
http://youtu.be/wp9hslrab70
IAU Talk: Transit of Venus Observations and Relics in South Africa. Willie Koorts talk at the 2006 IAU meeting in Prague, present via video in absentia, covers the full Transit of Venus history in South Africa from 1761 thru 2004.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9e8kVXKOCTE
Video: Discover how scientists used the last Venus transit and a geometric technique called parallax to verify the distance between sun and Earth. Find out what scientists hope to learn the next time Venus makes a shadow on the face of the sun. Launchpad: Transits courtesy of NASA eClips.
http://forum-network.org/lecture/transit-venus-passing-sun
Video: Transit of Venus: Passing the Sun, a 2004 lecture by Jay Pasachoff, gives historical background of transit of Venus and details how limb darkening and the telescope's point spread function contribute to the black drop effect.
http://uk.video.yahoo.com/watch/4464208/11964898
Video: English Bites-Transit of Venus gives historical background of the transit of Venus with emphasis on James Cook's expedition, then breaks down the reporter's word choice in a lesson in English vocabulary; from the Learn English website of the Australia Network.
Venus in Transit, 5-minute version from StarGazers for April 9-15, 2012; from PBS station WPBT. Script(s) at http://www.stargazersonline.org/episodes/1215.html.
http://discoveredsun.tumblr.com/post/22633500403/ieee-spectrum-magazines-podcast-interview-with
Podcast interview with Mark Anderson, author of The Day the World Discovered the Sun, explains the the value of the transit of Venus expeditions for navigational gain.

