Home   Sun, Moon & Space   Eclipses   November 13–14, 2157 Mercury Transit

November 13–14, 2157 Mercury Transit

Is this transit visible in Columbus?

2157 Mercury Transit Animation

This is how the 2157 Mercury Transit looks close to the center of the area where it is visible. Note: The location is in the Southern Hemisphere. The transit path can vary depending on your location. The curvature of the planet's path is due to the Earth's rotation.

Live Transit Animation will start at:
Live Transit Animation has ended.
You are using an outdated browser, to view the animation please update or switch to a modern browser.

Where to See the Transit

Try our new interactive eclipse maps. Zoom in and search for accurate eclipse times and visualizations for any location.

Where to See the 2157 Mercury Transit

Regions seeing at least some parts of the transit: Europe, Asia, Australia, Africa, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Antarctica.

Expand for some cities that can see at least part of the full transit

Is this transit visible in Columbus?

Who Can See the Transit

Shades of darkness

Night

Astronomical Twilight (Sun is 12 - 18 degrees below the horizon)

Nautical Twilight (Sun is 6 - 12 degrees below the horizon)

Civil Twilight (Sun is 0 - 6 degrees below the horizon)

Day

Entire transit visible

Parts of transit visible (Sun rises or sets during transit)

Transit not visible

When the 2157 Mercury Transit Happens Worldwide — Timeline

Planet transits are normally visible from all locations where the Sun is up. However, because of different viewing angles, the start and end times can vary by a few minutes. The times below are actual times (in UTC) when the transit is visible.

Eclipse Stages WorldwideUTC TimeLocal Time in Columbus*
First location to see the partial transit beginNov 14 at 03:11:01Nov 13 at 10:11:01 pm
Geocentric** partial transit begins (ingress, exterior contact)Nov 14 at 03:11:46Nov 13 at 10:11:46 pm
First location to see the full transit beginNov 14 at 03:12:51Nov 13 at 10:12:51 pm
Geocentric** full transit begins (ingress, interior contact)Nov 14 at 03:13:37Nov 13 at 10:13:37 pm
Mercury is closest to the Sun's centerNov 14 at 05:42:58Nov 14 at 12:42:58 am
Geocentric** full transit ends (egress, interior contact)Nov 14 at 08:12:24Nov 14 at 3:12:24 am
Last location to see full transit endNov 14 at 08:13:09Nov 14 at 3:13:09 am
Geocentric** transit ends (egress, exterior contact)Nov 14 at 08:14:14Nov 14 at 3:14:14 am
Last location to see partial transit endNov 14 at 08:14:59Nov 14 at 3:14:59 am

* These local times do not refer to a specific location but indicate the beginning, peak, and end of the eclipse on a global scale, each line referring to a different location. This transit isn't visible in Columbus.

** The geocentric times refer to a theoretical situation where the transit is viewed from the Earth's center. They are used to provide an approximately average time schedule for astronomical events. Because of varying perspectives, observers on the Earth's surface will experience the transit at slightly different times depending on their location.

Geocentric duration of this Mercury Transit is 5 hours, 2 minutes, 28 seconds.

Transits and eclipses visible in Columbus

Previous Mercury Transit was on May 13, 2154.

Next Mercury Transit will be on Nov 16 – Nov 17, 2170

Eclipse calculations usually accurate to a few seconds