Monday 23 December 2013

Zosma [deLeo], ability to integrate into a group that has lost one of its members

Zosma [Delta Leonis, deLeo, δ Leo] is the fourth brightest star in the constellation Leo (The Lion). It is a white star of spectral type A4V, with a surface temperature of 8350 K, about 23 times more luminous than the Sun, and its radius is twice the solar radius. It has a high rotation speed, at least 180 km/s at its equator (90 times greater than that of the Sun). It is estimated that within 350 million years it will begin to transform into an orange giant. Its apparent magnitude is +2.56 and it is located at a distance of about 58 light years from the Solar System.

It has a declination of +21º and it is located at the degree 11º of Virgo (+14º of celestial latitude).

The word Zosma comes from Persian and its meaning is 'sash' or 'encircle'. Along with Chertan, it formed the 'Al Kihil al Asad', which in Arabic means 'space between the shoulders of the lion', as well as 'Al Haratan', which in Arabic means 'two small ribs' or 'holes' that penetrate towards the interior of the lion.

In Chinese, Zosma was known as 太微 垣 T T (Tài Wēi Zuǒ Yuán wu), which means' The Fifth Star of the Right Wall of Supreme Palace Enclosure'.

The quality of the star Zosma reminds the planets Saturn and Venus. It is related with the ability to integrate into a group that has lost one of its members.

"Safe Heaven" (2013) [1]

"Safe Heaven" (2013) [2]

Leonor Watling, actress of the movie "My Life Without Me" (2003), has Zosma in Virgo (3rd Moon-Node House) in conjunction with Venus, wich is in square with Neptune in Sagittarius (12th Moon-Node House).

Julianne Hough, actress of the movie "Safe Heaven" (2013), has Zosma in Virgo (7th Moon-Node House) in conjunction with the Black Moon (apogee of the lunar orbit).

Meg Ryan, actress of the movie "Sleepless in Seattle" (1993), has Zosma in Virgo (12th Moon-Node House) in conjunction with Pluto; and in sextile with Venus-Neptune-Mercury in Scorpio (10th Moon-Node House).

Wednesday 18 December 2013

M87, future visions

Due to the magnitude of actual population, and overcoat, the media and the social and cultural interaction of present day, the evolution of collective consciousness is ver fast: after it begins, it only takes a few months to reach its culmination; while in the Renaissance could last several centuries.

The popularization of future visions, as well as the tools associated, like crystal balls, pendulums, and tarot cards, come about in the XVIII century, in spite that the first pack of tarot cards conservated almost completely, the wordly famous pack of Visconti-Sforza, was made in half of XV century, during the life period of Nostradamus
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The minor and mayor arcana were created separatedly, and later they fusion and popularized in the XVIII century as a tool for prediction, clashing with the discovery of the super massive black hole M87, discovered in the year 1781.

In Astrology, as in Theoretical Physics, black holes are related with time dilation and future progressions, like in the movie "Final Destination 3" (2006).

Ashley Green, actress of "Twilight Saga" (2008-2012) playing the role of Alice, known for its visions of future about people close to her, has M87 in the 7th Nodal House on a focal  position of an incomplet Yod: forms a quincunx with Mars in the 12th Nodal House, that is in sextile with the Sun in the 2nd Nodal House. Also, M87 is in opposition to Jupiter in the 1st Nodal House.

Jules Verne, writer of science fiction novels, has M87 in Virgo in trine with Uranus in Capricorn and sextile with Mars in Sagittarius.

Wednesday 17 April 2013

Quasars, time-space connections at the edge of chaos of a supermassive black hole

At the center of active galaxies there is a supermassive black hole that consume all the material around (gas and dust that falls into the discs of accretion). Quasars are powerful electromagnetic emission sources, formed during this processes.

Quasars are located at a critical distance, where there is an equilibrium between the gravity force of the super massive black hole and the scape speed of the electromagnetic radiation (edge of chaos). The mechanism implied in the transformation of matter into electromagnetic energy is unknown; it is 10 times more energetic than the processes of nuclear fusion that occurs inside of solar stars. Once the supermassive black hole consume all the matter around, the quasar disappears and the galaxy becomes inactive.

The first quasars were discovered at the end of the fifties and beginning of the sixties. In the year 1979 the gravitational lens effect predicted by Einstein's General Theory of Relativity was confirmed observationally for the first time with images of a double quasar. By that time appeared the first movie of "Star Trek" (1979). In the 1980s, unified models for quasars were developed. By that time appeared the movies "Terminator" (1984) and "Back to the Future" (1985).


(90482) Orcus and a quasar of a supermassive black hole
"Prince of Persia - Sands of Time" (2010)

Tuesday 19 March 2013

Great Attractor, accumulation of gravity forces

The Great Attractor is a gravity anomaly in intergalactic space within the range of the Centaurus Supercluster that reveals the existence of a localized concentration of mass equivalent to tens of thousands of galaxies, each of which is the size of the Milky Way; this mass is observable by its effect on the motion of galaxies and their associated clusters over a region hundreds of millions of light years across. [...] The first indications of a deviation from uniform expansion of the universe were reported in 1973 and again in 1978. The location of the Great Attractor was finally determined in 1986. (Wikipedia: Great Attractor)


The Great Attractor is related with enormous tasks that only can be overcomed by fast and constant work, a small distraction makes a giant accumulation. But if the individual keeps going, there is an opportunity for impressive results, like the training of Goku and Krilin in the manga-anime "Dragon Ball" (1986).

"Prince of Persia - Sands of Time" (2010)