The Day of the Indomitable One: Birthdays and Planet News

If Your Birthday is Thursday, Dec. 26 The Day of the Indomitable One | Pre-order the 2020 Capricorn Astrology Studio | All Other Signs A New Moon eclipse on your birthday indicates big changes ahead. But more than that, it’s an opportunity to reset patterns and trajectories. Where you point your canoe is of utmost … Read more

The Day of the Supernatural: Birthdays and Planet News

If Your Birthday is Wednesday, Dec. 25 The Day of the Supernatural | Pre-order the 2020 Capricorn Astrology Studio | All Other Signs Capricorns need to identify with some kind of ‘Great Work’ to feel satisfied: personal objectives that inspire total commitment. Whatever outstanding issues must be resolved to clear the decks for the future … Read more

Your Weekend Astrology for Dec. 14-15

The Moon’s journey through Cancer this weekend highlights all of the unusual activity in Capricorn, including the Saturn-Pluto conjunction that is exact in early January. That conjunction is a standing wave, and the Moon is about to sail through it. In Cancer, the Moon is sensitive and subject to being tossed and turned by potent … Read more

Full Moon in Gemini – Dec. 12, 2019, 05:12 UT

by Kirsti Melto

Lately we have learned about rare visitors, interstellar objects passing through our solar system. First there was ‘Oumuamua, the “first distant messenger,” which was already heading away from the Sun when it was discovered in October 1917. Then in August 2019 came Comet Borisov. Surprisingly there is one that has been with us all along and aims to stay, namely asteroid 514107 Ka’epaoka’awela.

Detail of photo of Amy Winehouse, whose Moon is conjunct Ka’epaoka’awela in Capricorn. Photo taken in 2008 by Eddie van der Walt.

The Full Moon in Gemini happens on Dec. 12, 2019. Opposite the Moon in Sagittarius is the unusual asteroid Ka’epaoka’awela in conjunction with the Sun. Ka’epaoka’awela is outstanding in many ways.

Ka’epaoka’awela’s orbit is retrograde. In other words, it moves in the opposite direction to most other bodies in the solar system. It is in a resonant, co-orbital motion with Jupiter. It is the first known asteroid in a 1:1 resonance with any of the planets. Its orbital period around the Sun is close to that of Jupiter.

How come Ka’epaoka’awela avoids crashing into the gas giant Jupiter? It passes either inside or outside Jupiter’s orbit, and each time it passes near Jupiter, its orbital elements are slightly altered. Scientists have concluded that Ka’epaoka’awela is originally an interstellar body and it has been in its retrograde resonance with Jupiter since the origin of the solar system. How it got captured into its orbit is still a mystery.

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