Showing posts with label Parallel of Declination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parallel of Declination. Show all posts

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Declinations of Sun, Moon and Planets 2019 | Parallels and Extremes

The Parallel Aspect is formed between two planets with the same declination or distance north or south
of the ecliptic. If the planets are both North or both South of the ecliptic, the parallel aspect is
read as a conjunction. If they are the same declination but one is North and one is South, then the
contra-parallel is read as a 180 degree opposition. These aspects are strongest when the orb is kept to
1 degree. They can also magnify the intensity of any other aspect between the two planets or points.
Declination exceeding the extremes of the Sun's declination (= out of bounds = ± 23.27⁰ geocentric
or ±7.15⁰ heliocentric) oftentimes correlates with (mostly minor) changes in trend in  financial
markets (HERE). Daily Declination Ephemerides can be found e.g. HERE

Declinations and Latitudes can be calculated online e.g. HERE

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Declinations of Sun, Moon and Planets 2018 | Parallels and Extremes


The Parallel Aspect is formed between two planets with the same declination or distance north or south of the ecliptic. If the planets are both North or both South of the ecliptic, the parallel aspect is read as a conjunction. If they are the same declination but one is North and one is South, then the contra-parallel is read as a 180 degree opposition. These aspects are strongest when the orb is kept to 1 degree. They can also magnify the intensity of any other aspect between the two planets or points.
On March 27 (Tue) 15:11 Mercury and Venus were parallel of declination at 9.2880 degrees north (HERE).
On April 4 (Wed) 14:30 Mercury and the Sun will be parallel of declination at 5.8257 degrees north.
On April 17 (Tue) 02:18 the Moon, the Sun and Uranus will be parallel of declination at 10.4128 degrees north. 
On April 20 (Fri) 13:00 Mercury's declination will bottom at 0.8124 degrees north while the Moon's declination will peak at 20.4433 degrees north the next morning. 
From May 6 (Sun) to June 8 (Fri) Venus will be out of bound (>23.4347 degrees north or south = beyond Sun's max-declination). Venus will reach maximum declination at 25.0537 degrees north on May 22 (Tue) 3:35 (HERE). Etc. 
Declinations Ephemerides can be found e.g. HERE + HERE 

Saturday, March 24, 2018

Saturday, March 10, 2018

S&P 500 Index vs Mercury - Venus Parallel of Declination | March 27 (Tue)


The Parallel Aspect of Declination is formed between two or more planets with the same declination or distance north or south of the ecliptic. On March 27th (Tue) 15:11 Mercury and Venus will be parallel of declination at 9.2880 degrees north. Quite likely this will mark some sort of a low in the stock market (HERE).

Saturday, July 29, 2017

SPX vs Declination of Mercury and Venus │ August 2017

No parallels of declination (= intersection of red and blue lines) in August, but a Venus declination swing high
on Aug 06 (Sun) and a Mercury declination swing low on Aug 16 (Wed) are potential market turn days.

Saturday, July 1, 2017

SPX vs Mercury and Venus Parallel of Declination | July 12 (Wed)

On July 12 (Wed) Mercury and Venus will be parallel of declination at 19 degrees north (circled in red).
This usually entails a change in trend (+/- 1 CD).
 A parallel aspect is formed between two planets with the same declination or distance north or south of the ecliptic. If the planets are both North or both South of the ecliptic, the parallel aspect is read as a conjunction. If they are the same declination but one is North and one is South, then the contra-parallel is read as a 180 degree opposition.