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ASTROTEOLOGIA-EVANGELIO EN LAS ESTRELLAS: MILKY WAY GALACTIC CENTER NORTH GALACTIC POLE COMA BERENICES "DARK RIFT" CENTER
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Resposta  Mensagem 1 de 4 no assunto 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Mensagem original) Enviado: 23/04/2025 03:58
Resultado de imagen para apple 666 venus


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De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 24/04/2025 14:50

Galactic coordinate system

 
 
Artist's depiction of the Milky Way Galaxy showing the origin and orientation of galactic longitude. The galactic longitude (l) runs from the Sun upwards in the image through the center of the galaxy. The galactic latitude (b) is perpendicular to the image (i.e. coming out of the image) and also centered on the Sun.

The galactic coordinate system is a celestial coordinate system in spherical coordinates, with the Sun as its center, the primary direction aligned with the approximate center of the Milky Way Galaxy, and the fundamental plane parallel to an approximation of the galactic plane but offset to its north. It uses the right-handed convention, meaning that coordinates are positive toward the north and toward the east in the fundamental plane.[1]

Spherical coordinates

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Galactic longitude

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The galactic coordinates use the Sun as the origin. Galactic longitude (l) is measured with primary direction from the Sun to the center of the galaxy in the galactic plane, while the galactic latitude (b) measures the angle of the object above the galactic plane.

Longitude (symbol l) measures the angular distance of an object eastward along the galactic equator from the Galactic Center. Analogous to terrestrial longitude, galactic longitude is usually measured in degrees (°).

Galactic latitude

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Latitude (symbol b) measures the angle of an object northward of the galactic equator (or midplane) as viewed from Earth. Analogous to terrestrial latitude, galactic latitude is usually measured in degrees (°).

Definition

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The first galactic coordinate system was used by William Herschel in 1785. A number of different coordinate systems, each differing by a few degrees, were used until 1932, when Lund Observatory assembled a set of conversion tables that defined a standard galactic coordinate system based on a galactic north pole at RA 12h 40mdec +28° (in the B1900.0 epoch convention) and a 0° longitude at the point where the galactic plane and equatorial plane intersected.[1]

In 1958, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) defined the galactic coordinate system in reference to radio observations of galactic neutral hydrogen through the hydrogen line, changing the definition of the Galactic longitude by 32° and the latitude by 1.5°.[1] In the equatorial coordinate system, for equinox and equator of 1950.0, the north galactic pole is defined at right ascension 12h 49mdeclination +27.4°, in the constellation Coma Berenices, with a probable error of ±0.1°.[2] Longitude 0° is the great semicircle that originates from this point along the line in position angle 123° with respect to the equatorial pole. The galactic longitude increases in the same direction as right ascension. Galactic latitude is positive towards the north galactic pole, with a plane passing through the Sun and parallel to the galactic equator being 0°, whilst the poles are ±90°.[3] Based on this definition, the galactic poles and equator can be found from spherical trigonometry and can be precessed to other epochs; see the table.

J2000.0 equatorial coordinates approximating the galactic reference points[1]
  Right ascension Declination Constellation
North Pole
+90° latitude
12h 51.4m +27.13° Coma Berenices
(near 31 Com)
South Pole
−90° latitude
0h 51.4m −27.13° Sculptor
(near NGC 288)
Center
0° longitude
17h 45.6m −28.94° Sagittarius
(in Sagittarius A)
Anticenter
180° longitude
5h 45.6m +28.94° Auriga
(near HIP 27180)

Galactic north

Galactic south

Galactic center
Approx galactic quadrants (NGQ/SGQ, 1–4) indicated, along with differentiating Galactic Plane (containing galactic centre) and the Galactic Coordinates Plane (containing our sun / solar system)

The IAU recommended that during the transition period from the old, pre-1958 system to the new, the old longitude and latitude should be designated lI and bI while the new should be designated lII and bII.[3] This convention is occasionally seen.[4]

Radio source Sagittarius A*, which is the best physical marker of the true Galactic Center, is located at 17h 45m 40.0409s−29° 00′ 28.118″ (J2000).[2] Rounded to the same number of digits as the table, 17h 45.7m, −29.01° (J2000), there is an offset of about 0.07° from the defined coordinate center, well within the 1958 error estimate of ±0.1°. Due to the Sun's position, which currently lies 56.75±6.20 ly north of the midplane, and the heliocentric definition adopted by the IAU, the galactic coordinates of Sgr A* are latitude +0° 07′ 12″ south, longitude 0° 04′ 06″. Since as defined the galactic coordinate system does not rotate with time, Sgr A* is actually decreasing in longitude at the rate of galactic rotation at the sun, Ω, approximately 5.7 milliarcseconds per year (see Oort constants).

Conversion between equatorial and galactic coordinates

[edit]

An object's location expressed in the equatorial coordinate system can be transformed into the galactic coordinate system. In these equations, α is right ascensionδ is declination. NGP refers to the coordinate values of the north galactic pole and NCP to those of the north celestial pole.[5]

sin⁡(�)=sin⁡(�NGP)sin⁡(�)+cos⁡(�NGP)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�−�NGP)cos⁡(�)sin⁡(�NCP−�)=cos⁡(�)sin⁡(�−�NGP)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�NCP−�)=cos⁡(�NGP)sin⁡(�)−sin⁡(�NGP)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�−�NGP){displaystyle {egin{aligned}sin(b)&=sin(delta _{	ext{NGP}})sin(delta )+cos(delta _{	ext{NGP}})cos(delta )cos(alpha -alpha _{	ext{NGP}})cos(b)sin(l_{	ext{NCP}}-l)&=cos(delta )sin(alpha -alpha _{	ext{NGP}})cos(b)cos(l_{	ext{NCP}}-l)&=cos(delta _{	ext{NGP}})sin(delta )-sin(delta _{	ext{NGP}})cos(delta )cos(alpha -alpha _{	ext{NGP}})end{aligned}}}

The reverse (galactic to equatorial) can also be accomplished with the following conversion formulas.

sin⁡(�)=sin⁡(�NGP)sin⁡(�)+cos⁡(�NGP)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�NCP−�)cos⁡(�)sin⁡(�−�NGP)=cos⁡(�)sin⁡(�NCP−�)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�−�NGP)=cos⁡(�NGP)sin⁡(�)−sin⁡(�NGP)cos⁡(�)cos⁡(�NCP−�){displaystyle {egin{aligned}sin(delta )&=sin(delta _{	ext{NGP}})sin(b)+cos(delta _{	ext{NGP}})cos(b)cos(l_{	ext{NCP}}-l)cos(delta )sin(alpha -alpha _{	ext{NGP}})&=cos(b)sin(l_{	ext{NCP}}-l)cos(delta )cos(alpha -alpha _{	ext{NGP}})&=cos(delta _{	ext{NGP}})sin(b)-sin(delta _{	ext{NGP}})cos(b)cos(l_{	ext{NCP}}-l)end{aligned}}}

Where:

�NGP=12ℎ51.4��NGP=27.13∘�NCP=122.93314∘{displaystyle alpha _{	ext{NGP}}=12^{h}51.4^{m}qquad delta _{	ext{NGP}}=27.13^{circ }qquad l_{	ext{NCP}}=122.93314^{circ }}

Rectangular coordinates

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In some applications use is made of rectangular coordinates based on galactic longitude and latitude and distance. In some work regarding the distant past or future the galactic coordinate system is taken as rotating so that the x-axis always goes to the centre of the galaxy.[6]

There are two major rectangular variations of galactic coordinates, commonly used for computing space velocities of galactic objects. In these systems the xyz-axes are designated UVW, but the definitions vary by author. In one system, the U axis is directed toward the Galactic Center (l = 0°), and it is a right-handed system (positive towards the east and towards the north galactic pole); in the other, the U axis is directed toward the galactic anticenter (l = 180°), and it is a left-handed system (positive towards the east and towards the north galactic pole).[7]

The anisotropy of the star density in the night sky makes the galactic coordinate system very useful for coordinating surveys, both those that require high densities of stars at low galactic latitudes, and those that require a low density of stars at high galactic latitudes. For this image the Mollweide projection has been applied, typical in maps using galactic coordinates.

In the constellations

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The galactic equator runs through the following constellations:[8]

See also

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Resposta  Mensagem 3 de 4 no assunto 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 25/04/2025 17:29

...which is not only a Galactic "Gate" but also a "hell-gate". We talked all about it in Solstice Hellgate Activation (Dec 25/Jan 3), linking it to the Mayan "Hell" Xibalba:

Resposta  Mensagem 4 de 4 no assunto 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 25/04/2025 17:37

The result:

The orbit of Venus narrowly misses the center of the SPS.

Everything does click, however, when we…

  • Rotate LHC/SPS diagram ~3.4 degrees counterclockwise
  • Use the (slightly larger) Moon size instead of the SPS

Now the orbit of Venus passes right through the center of the lunar SPS

And it is no random point on Venus's orbit: The lunar SPS center is specifically pinpointing Venus's "ascending node". That's where Venus crosses northward the plane of Earth's orbit (i.e. the ecliptic or the plane of the solar system)!

The ~3.4 degrees rotation actually makes perfect sense here because:

  • The ascending node is all about the inclination of the orbit relative to the ecliptic or Earth's orbital plane…
  • In the case of Venus, the orbital inclination is 3.4 degreesmatching the ~3.4 degree rotation required to bring the (lunar) SPS center to the Venus ascending node

Ascending nodes will play a critical role later on as well so we can be certain this is no coincidence.

The curious position of the SPS has now been perfectly explained.


Line of Nodes & Transit of Venus

The ascending node of Venus is aligned with the Galactic Meridian or "longitude 0" of the Milky Way (which passes through the Galactic Center and is perpendicular to the Milky Way/Galactic Equator).

The line is also heliocentrically aligned with Earth around June 8 and December 9 every year right when Earth's orbital position coincides with the LHC's ATLAS and CMS detectors.

From Earth's perspective, the Sun is at the Galactic Meridian on ~June 8 and ~December 9.

It's right there at the Sun's ~June 8 position that what astronomers call the Transit of Venus takes place, which is a very rare celestial event when Venus passes right in front of the Sun due to a very precise Earth-Venus-Sun alignment (accurate in 3D):

The most recent transit pair (they come in pairs) was in 2004 and 2012 (June 8 & June 6 respectively). The LHC went live in 2008 which was right at the halfway point, i.e. 4 years after the 1st Venus Transit and 4 years before the 2nd Venus Transit. (The previous Venus Transit pair was December 1874 and December 1882; the next pair will be December 10–11, 2117, and December 8, 2125.)


Jun 8, 2004 Planet Venus completes transit

That's enough evidence for us to safely conclude that the LHC was fully cognizant of what was happening in the sky.


Secret Design #3 - Mars-Mercury-Earth Orbital Interaction

Let us go deeper into the rabbit hole through… Mars. It is through Mars that we will finally flesh out the "Orion Stargate.

          

What we'll do now is, instead of Earth's orbit, we'll use Mars' orbit as the celestial analogue of the LHC like this:

[Note: The LHC/SPS is still in its 3.4 deg.-rotated orientation]

While nothing seems to stand out initially, we do get our first confirmation after rotating the LHC so that the SPS would "kiss" Mars' perihelion i.e. Mars' closest point to the Sun (and to Earth's orbit), like this:

  1. Earth's orbit (green) passes right through the center of the SPS
  2. Earth's equinoctial axis (horizontal) is tangential to the SPS

Now we are ready for the main revelation which commences with the following observation…



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