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WATCH: Close-up view of Mercury transit seen from space

Click to play video: 'Zoomed-in view of Mercury transit'
Zoomed-in view of Mercury transit
NASA's IRIS space telescope witnessed Mercury cross the face of the sun on May 9, providing us with a close-up view – May 18, 2016

On May 9, telescopes around the world were turned toward the sun to witness a rare event: Mercury passing in front of the sun. Space telescopes also had their eyes aimed on our nearest star, and one of them has provided us with a close-up view of the event.

The video shows a composite image of NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) together with NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).

When a planet passes in front of a star, or a moon passes in front of a planet, it’s called a transit.

WATCH: NASA scientist discusses significance of Mercury Transit

Click to play video: 'NASA scientist discusses significance of ‘Mercury Transit’'
NASA scientist discusses significance of ‘Mercury Transit’

Transits of Mercury occur, on average, every 13 years. The next one will be in 2019.

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Rarer still are transits of Venus, which occur once every eight years and then once every 105 years. The last transit of Venus was in 2012.

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