:''In
twelver Shi'ism 'the occultation' is the name given to the disappearance of the
Twelfth Imam. See also
occult (disambiguation).''
An 'occultation' is an event that occurs when one object is hidden by another object that passes between it and the observer. The word is used in
astronomy (see below) and can also be used in a general (non-astronomical) sense to describe when an object in the foreground
occults (covers up) objects in the background. In the general sense, occultation applies to the visual scene from low-flying aircraft and in Computer-Generated Image (
CGI) technology, where foreground objects obscure distant ones in a dynamic way as the scene changes.
'Astronomical events'. These include
transits and
eclipses. The word
transit refers to cases where the nearer object appears smaller in apparent size than the more distant object, such as transit of
Mercury or
Venus across the
Sun's disk. The word
eclipse generally refers to those instances in which one object moves into the shadow of another. Each of these three events is the visible effect of a
syzygy.
Every time an occultation occurs, an
eclipse also occurs. Consider a so-called "eclipse" of the Sun by the Moon, as seen from Earth. In this event, the Moon physically moves between Earth and the Sun, thus blocking out a portion or all of the bright disk of the Sun. Although this phenomenon is usually referred to as an "eclipse", this term is a misnomer, because the Moon is not ''eclipsing'' the Sun; instead the Moon is ''occulting'' the Sun. When the Moon ''occults'' the Sun, it casts a small shadow on the surface of the Earth, and therefore the Moon's shadow is partially eclipsing Earth. So a so-called "solar eclipse" actually consists of (i) an ''occultation'' of the Sun by the Moon, as seen from Earth, and (ii) a partial ''
eclipse'' of Earth by the Moon's shadow.
By contrast, an "eclipse" of the Moon is in fact a true eclipse: the Moon moves into the shadow cast back into space by Earth, and is said to be ''eclipsed'' by Earth's shadow. As seen from the surface of the Moon, Earth passes directly between the Moon and the Sun, thus blocking or ''occulting'' the Sun as seen by a hypothetical lunar observer. Again, every ''eclipse'' also entails an ''occultation''.
Occultations by the Moon
The term occultation is most frequently used to describe those relatively frequent occasions when the
Moon passes in front of a
star during the course of its orbital motion around the Earth. Since the Moon has no atmosphere and stars have no appreciable angular size, a star that is occulted by the moon will disappear or reappear very nearly instantaneously on the moon's edge, or limb. Events that take place on the Moon's dark limb are of particular interest to observers, because the lack of glare allows these occultations to more easily be observed and timed.
The Moon's orbit is inclined to the
ecliptic (see
orbit of the Moon), and any stars with an ecliptic latitude of less than about 6.5 degrees may be occulted by it. There are three first magnitude stars that are sufficiently close to the ecliptic that they may be occulted by the Moon and by planets --
Regulus,
Spica and
Antares. Occultations of
Aldebaran are presently only possible by the Moon, because the planets pass Aldebaran to the north. Neither planetary nor lunar occultations of
Pollux are currently possible. However, in the far future, occultations of Aldebaran and Pollux will be possible, as they were in the far past.
Within a few kilometres of the edge of an occultation's predicted path, referred to as its northern or southern limit, an observer may see the star intermittently disappearing and reappearing as the irregular limb of the Moon moves past the star, creating what is known as a
Grazing lunar occultation. From an observational and scientific standpoint, these "grazes" are the most dynamic and interesting of lunar occultations.
The accurate timing of lunar occultations is performed regularly by (primarily amateur) astronomers. Lunar occultations timed to an accuracy of a few tenths of a second have various scientific uses, particularly in refining our knowledge of lunar topography. Photoelectric analysis of lunar occultations have also discovered some stars to be very close visual or spectroscopic
binaries. Early radio astronomers found occultations of radio sources by the Moon valuable for determining their exact positions, because the long wavelength of radio waves limited the resolution available through direct observation.
Several times during the year, someone on Earth can usually observe the Moon occulting a planet. Since planets, unlike stars, have significant angular sizes, lunar occultations of planets will create a narrow zone on earth from which a partial occultation of the planet will occur. An observer located within that narrow zone could observe the planet's disk partly blocked by the slowly moving moon.
On the 20th of January 2007, an occultation of Venus by the Moon was seen on the southern tip of Africa.
On 3rd of February 2007, an occultation of Saturn by the Moon was seen.
Occultation by planets
Stars may also be occulted by planets. In 1959,
Venus occulted
Regulus.
Uranus' rings were first discovered when that planet occulted a star in 1977. On the evening of
July 2-
July 3,
1989,
Saturn passed in front of the 5th magnitude star 28
Sagitarii. Pluto, which was re-designated as a "dwarf planet" in 2006, occulted stars in 1988, 2002, and 2006, allowing its tenuous atmosphere to be studied.
It is also possible for one planet to occult another planet. However, these mutual occultations of planets are extremely rare. The last such event occurred on
January 3,
1818 and will next occur on
November 22,
2065, in both cases involving the same two planets -- Venus and Jupiter. Technically speaking, when the foreground planet is smaller in apparent size than the background planet, the event should be called a "mutual planetary transit." When the foreground planet is larger in apparent size than the background planet, the event should be called a "mutual planetary occultation." (See
Transit for a list of past and future events).
Twice during the orbital cycles of Jupiter and Saturn, the equatorial (and satellite) planes of those planets are aligned with earth's orbital plane, resulting in a series of mutual occultations and eclipses between the moons of these giant planets. These orbital alignments have also occurred artificially when unmanned spacecraft have traversed these planetary systems, resulting in photographs such as the one shown here. The terms "eclipse," "occultation" and "transit" are also used to describe these events. A satellite of Jupiter (for example) may be eclipsed (i.e. made dimmer because it moves into Jupiter's shadow), occulted (i.e. hidden from view because Jupiter lies on our line of sight), or may transit (i.e. pass in front of) Jupiter's disk.
Double occultations
It is possible that the moon or another celestial body can occult multiple celestial bodies at the same time. Such events are extremely rare and can be seen only from a small part of the world. The last event of such type was on April 23rd, 1998 when the moon occulted Venus and Jupiter simultaneously for observers on Ascension Island.
Occulting satellites
The ''Big Occulting Steerable Satellite (BOSS)'' was a proposed
satellite that would work in conjunction with a
telescope to detect
planets around distant stars. The satellite consists of a large, very lightweight sheet, and a set of maneuvering thrusters and navigation systems. It would maneuver to a position along the line of sight between the telescope and a nearby star. The satellite would thereby block the radiation from the star, permitting the orbiting planets to be observed.
[1]
The proposed satellite would have a dimension of 70 m × 70 m, a mass of about 600 kg, and maneuver by means of an
ion drive engine in combination with using the sheet as a light sail. Positioned at a distance of 100,000 km from the telescope, it would block more than 99.998% of the starlight.
There are two possible configurations of this satellite. The first would work with a
space telescope, most likely positioned near the
Earth's L2
Lagrangian point. The second would place the satellite in a highly elliptical orbit about the Earth, and work in conjunction with a ground telescope. At the
apogee of the orbit, the satellite would remain relatively stationary with respect to the ground, allowing longer exposure times.
An updated version of this design is called the
Starshade, which uses a
sunflower-shaped
coronagraph disc. A comparable proposal was also made for a satellite to occult bright X-ray sources, called an ''X-ray Occulting Steerable Satellite'' or XOSS.
[2]
Occultations and transits between 1800 and 2100
This table lists occultations and transits of bright stars and planets by solar planets.
| Day | Time (UT) | Foreground planet | Background object |
|---|
| December 9, 1802 | 7:36 | Mercury | Acrab |
| December 9, 1808 | 20:34 | Mercury | Saturn |
| December 22, 1810 | 6:32 | Venus | Xi-2 Sagittarii |
| January 3, 1818 | 21:52 | Venus | Jupiter |
| July 11, 1825 | 9:10 | Venus | Delta-1 Tauri |
| July 11, 1837 | 12:50 | Mercury | Eta Geminorum |
| May 9, 1841 | 19:35 | Venus | 17 Tauri |
| September 27, 1843 | 18:00 | Venus | Eta Virginis |
| December 16, 1850 | 11:28 | Mercury | Lambda Sagittarii |
| May 22, 1855 | 5:04 | Venus | Epsilon Geminorum |
| June 30, 1857 | 0:25 | Saturn | Delta Geminorum |
| December 5th, 1865 | 14:20 | Mercury | Lambda Sagittarii |
| February 28, 1876 | 5:13 | Jupiter | Acrab |
| June 7, 1881 | 20:54 | Mercury | Epsilon Geminorum |
| December 9, 1906 | 17:40 | Venus | Acrab |
| July 27, 1910 | 2:53 | Venus | Eta Geminorum |
| June 10, 1940 | 2:21 | Mercury | Epsilon Geminorum |
| October 25, 1947 | 1:45 | Venus | Zuben-el-genubi |
| July 7, 1959 | 14:30 | Venus | Regulus |
| September 27, 1965 | 15:31 | Mercury | Eta Virginis |
| May 13, 1971 | 20:00 | Jupiter | Beta Scorpii (both components) |
| April 8, 1976 | 1:00 | Mars | Epsilon Geminorum |
| November 17, 1981 | 14:27 | Venus | Nunki |
| November 19, 1984 | 1:32 | Venus | Lambda Sagittarii |
| February 17, 2035 | 15:19 | Venus | Pi Sagittarii |
| October 1, 2044 | 22:00 | Venus | Regulus |
| February 23, 2046 | 19:24 | Venus | Rho-1 Sagittarii |
| November 10, 2052 | 7:20 | Mercury | Zuben-el-genubi |
| November 22, 2065 | 12:45 | Venus | Jupiter |
| July 15, 2067 | 11:56 | Mercury | Neptune |
| October 3, 2078 | 22:00 | Mars | Theta Ophiuchi |
| August 11, 2079 | 1:30 | Mercury | Mars |
| October 27, 2088 | 13:43 | Mercury | Jupiter |
| April 7, 2094 | 10:48 | Mercury | Jupiter |
These events are not visible everywhere the occulting body and the occulted body are above the skyline. Some events are barely visible, because they take place in close proximity to the Sun.
Mutual planetary transits and occultations
In rare cases, one planet can transit in front of another. The next time this will happen (as seen from Earth) will be on
November 22 2065 at about 12:43
UTC, when Venus near
superior conjunction (with an
angular diameter of 10.6") will transit in front of
Jupiter (with an angular diameter of 30.9"); however, this will take place only 8° west of the Sun, and will therefore not be visible to the unaided/unprotected eye. When the nearer object has a larger
angular diameter than the farther object, thus covering it completely, the event is not a transit but an occultation. Before transiting Jupiter, Venus will occult Jupiter's
moon Ganymede at around 11:24 UTC as seen from some southernmost parts of Earth.
Parallax will cause actual observed times to vary by a few minutes, depending on the precise location of the observer.
There are only 18 mutual planetary transits and occultations as seen from Earth between 1700 and 2200. Note the long break of events between 1818 and 2065!
★ 19 Sep 1702 - Jupiter occults Neptune
★ 20 Jul 1705 - Mercury transits Jupiter
★ 14 Jul 1708 - Mercury occults Uranus

A simulation of
Venus transiting
Jupiter, as it did on January 3, 1818.
★ 04 Oct 1708 - Mercury transits Jupiter
★ 28 May 1737 - Venus occults Mercury
★ 29 Aug 1771 - Venus transits Saturn
★ 21 Jul 1793 - Mercury occults Uranus
★ 09 Dec 1808 - Mercury transits Saturn
★ 03 Jan 1818 - Venus transits Jupiter
★ 22 Nov 2065 - Venus transits Jupiter
★ 15 Jul 2067 - Mercury occults Neptune
★ 11 Aug 2079 - Mercury occults Mars
★ 27 Oct 2088 - Mercury transits Jupiter
★ 07 Apr 2094 - Mercury transits Jupiter
★ 21 Aug 2104 - Venus occults Neptune
★ 14 Sep 2123 - Venus transits Jupiter
★ 29 Jul 2126 - Mercury occults Mars
★ 03 Dec 2133 - Venus occults Mercury
The
1737 event was observed by
John Bevis at
Greenwich Observatory - it is the only detailed account of a mutual planetary occultation. A transit of Mars across Jupiter on
12 Sep 1170 was observed by the monk Gervase at
Canterbury, and by Chinese astronomers. In addition, an occultation of Mars by Venus was observed by
M. Möstlin at
Heidelberg on
October 3 1590.
See also
★
Asteroid occultation
★
Transit (also for occultations of planets by other planets)
★
Transit of Mercury
★
Transit of Venus
★
Solar eclipse
★
Grazing lunar occultation
★
Grazing occultation
★
Syzygy
★
Radio occultation
References
1. The Big Occulting Steerable Satellite (BOSS), C. J. Copi, G. D. Starkman, , , The Astrophysical Journal, 2000
2. The X-ray Occulting Steerable Satellite (XOSS)
External links
★
International Occultation Timing Association (IOTA)
★
Occultations of Regulus by planets (in German)
★
Occultations of stars by planets (in German)
★
Occultations of planets by other planets
★
Big Occulting Steerable Satellite
★
Moon, planets, asteroid occultations
★
Mutual occultations (and conjunctions) of planets
★
Society for Popular Astronomy - Occultation Section
★ SPACE.com:
Discovery Hints at a Quadrillion Space Rocks Beyond Neptune (Sara Goudarzi) 15 August 2006 06:13 am ET
External references
★ Meeus, Jean: ''Astronomical Tables of the Sun, Moon and Planets.'' Richmond, Virginia: Willmann-Bell, Inc., 1995, ISBN 0-943396-45-X.
★ Marco Peuschel
[1], Astronomische Tabellen für den Mond von 2007 bis 2016,Mondphasen, Apsiden, Knotendurchgänge, Maximale und minimale Deklinationswerte und Sternbedeckungen sowie ausführliche Ephemeriden für jeden Tag des Jahres , inkl. Mondauf-und Untergänge und physische Daten.