Why Is it so Dangerous to Look at the Sun During the Venus Transit?

(Image credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center)

If you want to watch the transit of Venus  on June 5 - 6, just make sure you heed the advice of eye experts – don’t stare directly at the sun. And definitely don’t watch it if you're on LSD.

Anytime you look at the sun for longer than a few seconds it can lead to permanent eye damage. And that's what makes the Venus of transit — which won't occur again for more than 100 years — so dangerous: It gives people a reason to stare at the sun for long stretches. When unprotected eyes stare at the sun for a prolonged period of time, the intense visible light can damage, or even destroy, light-sensitive rod and cone cells inside of the retina, says David R. Copenhagen, a professor at the University of California's department of ophthalmology.

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