
https://youtu.be/BMydiZwiQjY
nemesis maturity
Published on Apr 1, 2019
Mercury transits occur just 13 times per century, on average. They're so rare because the innermost planet's orbit is inclined by about 7 degrees compared to that of Earth, so Mercury, the sun and our home planet just don't line up all that often. Mark your calendar! Mercury will cross the sun's face from Earth's perspective on Monday (November11, 2019) in the first such "transit" since 2016. The next one won't occur until Nov. 13, 2032. This is an unusual event, not to be missed. The rare transit begins at 12:35