Edmund Rosales, an astronomer from the P

Edmund Rosales, an astronomer from the Philippine Astronomical society, points to the position of Venus, sliding across the sun, on a projection, from a weather observatory in Manila on June 6, 2012. Sky-gazers around the world held up their telescopes and viewing glasses June 6, to watch Venus slide across the sun -- a rare celestial phenomenon that will not happen again for more than 100 years. Other small dots on the right of the photo are called sun spots. AFP PHOTO/TED ALJIBE (Photo credit should read TED ALJIBE/AFP/GettyImages)
Edmund Rosales, an astronomer from the Philippine Astronomical society, points to the position of Venus, sliding across the sun, on a projection, from a weather observatory in Manila on June 6, 2012. Sky-gazers around the world held up their telescopes and viewing glasses June 6, to watch Venus slide across the sun -- a rare celestial phenomenon that will not happen again for more than 100 years. Other small dots on the right of the photo are called sun spots. AFP PHOTO/TED ALJIBE (Photo credit should read TED ALJIBE/AFP/GettyImages)
Edmund Rosales, an astronomer from the P
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Credit:
TED ALJIBE / Staff
Editorial #:
145786171
Collection:
AFP
Date created:
June 06, 2012
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Source:
AFP
Barcode:
AFP
Object name:
Hkg7413872