Archive
02/19/2015 – Ephemeris – What’s a conjunction?
Ephemeris for Thursday, February 19th. The sun will rise at 7:37. It’ll be up for 10 hours and 39 minutes, setting at 6:16. The moon, 1 day past new, will set at 7:32 this evening.
Saturday night* Venus will be in conjunction with Mars. To me the best sight will be tomorrow night when the thin crescent moon will join the two planets in a very picturesque triangle. Conjunctions are terms shared between astronomers and astrologers and why shouldn’t they be, astrology is, in my opinion, astronomy’s illegitimate parent. To astronomers conjunctions are when two solar system objects are directly north and south of each other (the same right ascension). Astrologers have the conjunction on the same date, but most will say it’s occurring in Aries. Astronomers in the other hand can see that the two planets are now seen against the stars of western Pisces. Most astrologers don’t recognize the precession of the earth’s axis, it’s 26,000 year wobble in their calculations.
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
* As reported in the radio program it was Sunday. However the two planets appear closest Saturday night. 7 p.m. EST ( UT – 5 hr) on the 21st is actually 0 hr UT on the 22nd (Sunday).
Addendum

The big picture: In a conjunction planets simply happen to appear along a line of sight from the Earth. They have nothing to do with each other. This is the location of the planets Earth, Venus and Mars on February 22, 2015. Created using Celestia.
Below see the shift of the vernal equinox or first point of Aries, as it’s sometimes called has shifted from 150 CE in Ptolemy’s day to today.
12/19/2013 – Ephemeris – The mystery of the Star of Bethlehem
Ephemeris for Thursday, December 19th. The sun will rise at 8:15. It’ll be up for 8 hours and 49 minutes, setting at 5:04. The moon, 2 days past full, will rise at 7:34 this evening.
The Star of Bethlehem is one of the great mysteries of Christmas. The Chinese of that time were the only ones that recorded the happenings in the heavens. There were no bright stars that appeared near the time of Christ’s birth. That leads us to the Magi themselves, if that’s who they were. Magi were astrologer priests of the Zoroastrian religion in Persia. They saw signs in the positions of the planets that would go unnoticed to the Jews to which astrology was forbidden. Conjunctions where two or more planets gathered together were the most powerful of these configurations. There was a triple conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn in seven BC, and two extremely close conjunctions between Jupiter and Venus in 3 and 2 BC. Could one of those be it?
Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum

The Jupiter-Saturn triple conjunction of 7 BC. Click on the image to enlarge and animate. Created using Cartes du Ciel.

Animation of the Jupiter-Venus conjunction of August 3, 3 BC. in the morning twilight. Created using Stellarium.
Click on the image to enlarge and show the animation. Jupiter is rising while Venus, the brighter one, is heading back to the sun. Jupiter will seem to mate with Venus. 9 months later, the human gestation period their paths seem to cross again.

June of 2 BC just after sunset Jupiter and Venus again cross paths. Created using Stellarium.
Click on the image to enlarge and show the animation.
05/13/11 – Ephemeris – Astronomical meaning of the morning planet lineup
Friday, May 13th. Today the sun will be up for 14 hours and 43 minutes, setting at 9:01. The moon, 3 days past first quarter, will set at 4:09 tomorrow morning. Tomorrow the sun will rise at 6:16
The planet grouping that’s now breaking up in the morning twilight might be taken as having meaning by astrologers. To astronomers it’s just a nice line up of planets, that is along our line of sight. Let’s look at their distances from the earth. Mercury is actually closest of the four now at 86 million miles, The rest are farther than the sun. Venus is next farthest at 139 million miles. Next comes Mars at 214 million miles away. Finally there’s Jupiter at 541 million miles out. So these planets are grouped by accident of their directions from the earth. They are not really close together. As far as influence goes, the moon, Jupiter and Venus gave the greatest gravitational effect of the earth, but that’s miniscule compared to the sun.
* Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.
Addendum
Here’s the animation of the morning planets this month.
01/17/11 – Ephemeris – Professor Kunkle’s “Bombshell”
Martin Luther King Day, Monday, January 17th. The sun will rise at 8:14. It’ll be up for 9 hours and 15 minutes, setting at 5:30. The moon, 2 days before full, will set at 7:09 tomorrow morning.
Minneapolis astronomy professor Parke Kunkle recently gave an interview with a reporter stating that the constellations of the Zodiac no longer match the astrological Zodiacal signs. This caused a great sensation, with people calling up their astrologers wondering what it would do to their horoscopes. Kunkle’s little bombshell is covered in every first year astronomy course in the precession of the equinoxes, shifting the constellations by one in about 2200 years. Kunkle also mentioned a thirteenth constellation of the Zodiac. Scorpius lies mostly below the ecliptic or path of the sun in the sky. The area above the scorpions tail is Ophiuchus the serpent bearer. I am an Ophiuchucan, and we Ophiuchans don’t believe in astrology.
* Times are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan. They may be different for your location.




