Comet closest to earth. New technologies for space: "Self-healing" materials, rolled solar panels and a nuclear engine for a marshall When the comet arrives in the year

Below is a list of comets that have come closest to Earth. Competitors are ranked.

Click on any blue bar to view information about the desired comet.

1 Comet Leksel

In the entire history of observations, comet Leksel flew closest to our planet. On July 1, 1770, the comet approached the Earth at a distance of 2.24 million km. This is about 6 distances from the Earth to the Moon.

The comet is named after Andrei Ivanovich Leksel, who calculated its orbit. Discovered by Charles Messier on June 14, 1770. In 1767, the comet came very close to Jupiter and, as a result of its gravity, changed its orbit and passed at the closest distance from our planet.

Leksel's comet ranks first in the list of comets that have flown closest to Earth. It passed only 5.9 lunar distances from Earth in July 1770. It was so close that Charles Messier noted that the comet's coma looked roughly like four visible moons.

2. Comet Tempel-Tuttle

Comet Tempel-Tuttle 55P/1366 U1

According to astronomers' calculations, comet 55P/1366 U1 (Temple-Tuttle) passed Earth in October 1366 at a distance of 8.9 lunar distances.

Comet Tempel-Tuttle from the family of Uranus. The comet has a nucleus with a diameter of 4 kilometers and orbits the Sun in approximately 33.2 years.

As a result of the release of matter from the nucleus of a comet, the Leonid meteor shower is formed. The comet was discovered by Ernst Tempel on December 19, 1865 and Horace Tuttle on January 6, 1866 independently of each other. In honor of them, it got its name.

3. Comet P/2016 BA14

Comet P/2016 BA14

Comet P/2016 BA14 (Pan-STARRS) passed Earth on March 22, 2016. Comet P/2016 BA14 passed at a distance of 3.6 million kilometers or about 9 lunar distances from Earth, which is very close for a comet.

Comet P/2016 BA14 is the third comet to pass closest to our planet on record. P/2016 BA14 is the closest comet to Earth in the last 246 years!

4. Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock

Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock

This small comet came very close to our planet. Almost catching up with the record holder comet Leksel-Messier.

In 1983, comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock appeared in the sky at a distance of only 4.7 million km from Earth. Scientists were able to determine that the substance of this comet contains sulfur.

In 1983, comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock could be seen with the naked eye. She literally moved across the night sky. Note that most comets move so slowly against the sky that you can only notice their movement if you watch them for at least an hour.

In May 1983 comet C/1983 H1 (IRAS-Araki-Alcock) passed at 12.2 lunar distances from Earth. Comet IRAS currently ranks fourth on the list after comet P/2016 BA14.

5. Comet Hartley-2

Comet Hartley-2

A small comet 103P / Hartley (or Hartley-2) flew past our planet at 11 million km. The comet was visible from Earth with the naked eye on October 20, 2010.

Hartley-2 belongs to short-period comets - it makes a complete flight around the Sun in 6 years and 5 months. However, it may change. Hartley-2 belongs to the Jupiter family - a group of comets, the point of maximum distance from the Sun for which is within the influence of Jupiter. The gravitational grip of the gas giant either throws the comet beyond its orbit, or, on the contrary, attracts it - the fluctuations amount to tens of millions of kilometers! So, in 1971, the period of Hartley-2 was a year longer. A comet rotates around its own axis in 18 hours. It is interesting that the comet rotates along two axes at once - approximately along the length and width.

Hartley 2 will completely disappear after 100 revolutions around the Sun. In Earth's night sky, the comet reached magnitude +5 and could be seen with ordinary binoculars. The tail and coma of the comet were clearly distinguished. The combination of the high outgassing of the comet's nucleus and the short distance provided very detailed data on the composition of the comet.

However, most of the data on Hartley-2 scientists received using the Deep Impact spacecraft. By completing its unusual mission to shoot down comet Tempel 1 in 2005, the Deep Impact probe saved a lot of resources and paved the way for Hartley 2. Approach of 695 kilometers was enough to determine the main characteristics of Hartley-2, namely:

The size of the comet is very modest - no more than 2 km long. She has a dumbbell shape typical of actively decaying comets. The thickness of the thin bridge of the comet is only 400 meters.

Hartley-2 consists mainly of frozen water with hydrocarbon impurities and "dry ice" - a solid form of CO2, carbon dioxide. During the gradual approach of the comet to perihelion, the point of closest approach to the Sun, they begin to actively evaporate. From the thickness of the nucleus - the solid part of the comet - jets break out, streams of heated gases.

The surface of Hartley-2 is as black as fresh asphalt. It reflects only 2% of the incident light from the sun. At the ends of the comet's nucleus, there are placers of stones with a diameter of 50-80 meters - they are several times brighter than the main surface of Hartley-2.

Jets and gases of surface evaporation sweep out a large amount of dust, which lies in thick layers between layers of ice. Without these bright special effects, the dark core of Hartley 2 is hard to see.

The most detailed image of the surface of Comet Hartley 2

6 Comet Hyakutake

Comet Hyakutake (Hyakutake)

Comet Hyakutake flew from our planet at a distance of 1/10 from the Sun to the Earth - 14.9 million km. The comet illuminated the sky with a bluish-green light due to the presence of diatomic carbon emissions in its composition. Hyakutake was also the first comet to emit X-rays.

Comet Hyakutake, official name C/1996 B2 (Hyakutake) - long period comet, discovered on January 30, 1996 by Japanese amateur astronomer Yuji Hyakutake. In March 1996, the comet passed relatively close to the Earth (its approach was one of the closest approaches of comets to the Earth in the last 200 years). The comet was very bright and easily visible to the naked eye in the night sky, earning it the name "Big Comet of 1996". For some time, Comet Hyakutake eclipsed Comet Hale-Bopp, which at that time was approaching the inner region. solar system.

The observation of Comet Hyakutake led to several scientific discoveries. The most surprising for scientists was the first discovered x-rays comet, probably caused by the interaction of the ionized solar wind with neutral atoms in the comet's coma. In addition, the Ulysses spacecraft unexpectedly crossed the tail of Comet Hyakutake at a distance of more than 500 million km from the nucleus, which indicates that this comet has the longest tail known at present.

Until the last pass of Comet Hyakutake through the solar system, its orbital period was equal to 17,000 years, but after interaction with gravitational field giant planets, it has increased to 74,000 years.

7 Halley's Comet

most famous comet

The most famous comet is Halley's Comet, visible from Earth every 75-76 years. Thus, any person can observe it twice in his life.

Named after the astronomer Edmund Halley. The comet is associated with the Orionids and Aquarids meteor showers. Halley's Comet is the only short-period comet that is clearly visible to the naked eye. Starting from the earliest observations recorded in historical sources China and Babylon, at least 30 comet appearances have been noted. The first reliably identifiable sighting of Halley's comet dates back to 240 BC. The comet's last perihelion passage was February 9, 1986 in the constellation Aquarius. The next one is expected on July 28, 2061, and then on March 27, 2134.

During its appearance in 1986, Halley's Comet became the first comet to be explored by spacecraft, including the Soviet Vega-1 and Vega-2 spacecraft, which provided data on the structure of the cometary nucleus and the mechanisms of formation of the comet's coma and tail.

The perihelion of the comet is elevated above the plane of the ecliptic by 0.17 AU. e. Due to the large eccentricity of the orbit, the speed of Halley's comet with respect to the Earth is one of the largest among all bodies in the solar system. In 1910, when flying past our planet, it was 70.56 km / s (254016 km / h). Halley's comet approached the Earth at a distance of 0.1 AU.

8 Comet Lulin

Comet Lulin

In 2009, the closest comet to Earth was Comet Lulin (C/2007 N3 Lulin). Comet Lulin was visible to the naked eye in the constellation Leo as a speck, corresponding in brightness to a star of the fifth magnitude.

According to scientists, Comet Lulin was at a distance of 61 million km from Earth. The photographs of the comet showed two tails - plasma and dust, and in early February, a part of the comet's tail was recorded under the influence of the solar wind.

Comet Lulin was discovered in July 2007 by two Chinese astronomers Quan Zhi Ye and Chi Sheng Lin and was named after the Lulin Observatory in Taiwan, where one of them worked.

9 Comet McNaught

The brightest comet

Comet McNaught lit up the sky in 2007, becoming the brightest comet ever. McNaught was nicknamed the Great Comet of 2007. Astronomers managed to observe it, as a result shedding light on the matter of comets.

Comet C/2006 P1 was discovered by astronomer Robert McNaught in August 2006. In January-February 2007, Comet McNaught became the brightest comet visible from Earth in over 40 years. Luckily, the robotic spacecraft Ulysses unexpectedly crossed the tail of Comet McNaught in 2007, allowing astronomers to collect useful and necessary data.

The Ulysses spacecraft has penetrated the tail of Comet McNaught, which consists of ionized gas, the outflow of which extends to a distance of 1.5 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun! And this amounted to about 224 million km.

It reached its closest distance to Earth (0.81 astronomical units) on January 15, 2007.

10 Comet Hale-Bopp

The most memorable comet of the 20th century

Hale-Bopp is the most memorable comet of the 20th century. Earthlings watched her for 18 months from 1996 to 1997.

Comet Hale-Bopp circled the Sun, putting on a dazzling spectacle in Earth's night sky. In many pictures taken when the comet passed the perihelion point, the comet's memorable tails are clearly visible - whitish and bluish ion.

The ion tail stretches more than 10 degrees across the northern sky, fading somewhere near the Perseus double star cluster, while the comet's head is near the bright star Almac in the constellation Andromeda.

Comet Hale-Bopp was visible to the naked eye from about the end of March 1996 to September 1997.

On March 23, 1997, it approached the minimum distance to the Earth - 196 million km. The comet will return to Earth around the year 4390.

11. Comet of the Century

Comet of the Century flies to Earth

Brightest comet of the decade

Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON) was discovered on September 21, 2012 by Russian astronomer Artem Novichonok and astronomer from Belarus Vitaly Nevsky at an observatory in the Kislovodsk region, which is part of the international ISON network. This comet can arrange an unprecedented celestial show and, if the forecasts come true, will become one of the brightest and largest comets in the history of mankind. So far, the comet looks like a small dot, but by autumn it will become brighter than the moon.

Telescope "Hubble" took a photo of the comet ISON, which is steadily approaching us. As a result of the analysis of the images, it was found that the nucleus of the comet ISON has a size of about 6 kilometers, a cloud of dust and gas around the nucleus of a celestial body reaches 5 thousand kilometers in diameter, and the length of the comet's tail exceeds 92 thousand kilometers. It is expected that as the comet approaches the Sun, its tail and gas envelope will increase.

Observations have shown that the comet dumps about 51000 kg of dust per minute, and the entire mass of the comet can be estimated at ~1.5 billion tons. Imagine what will happen if such a snowball with a diameter of 6 kilometers at a speed of approximately 75,600 km / h crashes into the Earth. For comparison, the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs had a diameter of 10 kilometers, a mass of 4.1 trillion. tons and a speed of 30 km/s. Fortunately for us, the distance at which the comet will fly past the Earth is not dangerous, but for watching the show it is the most optimal.

Currently The comet is 600 million kilometers from the Sun and can only be seen from Earth through a super-powerful telescope. And still, even through a telescope, the comet will only look like a small bright dot. But day by day ISON will come closer and closer to the Earth. Astronomers promise that by the end of summer, earthlings will be able to see the comet even with household binoculars and home telescopes.

Forecasts

Expected, that ISON should come closer to the Sun than other comets. The moment of closest approach will come on November 28, 2013, when the comet will be at a distance of only 1.1 million kilometers from the surface of our star. At this time, the comet will be seen very clearly, and its brightness will exceed the brightness of the moon in the full moon (-13 magnitude). It will be the brightest comet that the inhabitants of the Earth have seen in the last decade or even a century. For this, comet ISON has already been called the Comet of the Century. The comet can be observed next to the Sun even during the day.

comet orbit, most likely parabolic. This means that it came from the Oort Cloud. On December 26, 2013, the comet will fly by at 0.4 AU. e. (60 million km) from the Earth. ISON has never made close encounters with the giant planets, and there are suggestions that it will not survive close encounters with the Sun's atmosphere. In general, as in the case of other comets, the fate of ISON will be decided by our luminary - whether it will receive the title of Comet of the Century, or melt without a trace, crumbling into small components. But if the comet survives, it will be visible even during the day (like the moon), and at night its plume will stretch widely across the entire earth's sky.

Observations with Deep Impact

NASA spacecraft Deep Impact is currently monitoring Comet ISON. Based on images taken on January 17-18, 2013 by the camera aboard Deep Impact, scientists were even able to make a short video.

Scientists note:“We were delighted that we were able to make these observations when the comet was only 5 AU away. from the sun. Soon the comet should pass Mars at a fairly close distance, and we will try to observe it with the Curiosity rover from Mars, as well as track its movement with other vehicles in space.

What's ahead

So far, the brightest comet of the 20th century is C / 1965 S1 (Ikeya - Seki), which in 1965 had a magnitude of -10 at perihelion (brighter objects have more negative values. And the most unforgettable events of the 20th century are, of course, the observation of a comet from Earth Hale Bopp and the fall of a comet on Jupiter Shoemaker-Levy. Let's see if ISON can outshine these achievements.

Anyway, hope for the show cannot be lost, as comet C/2012 S1 could create unusual view meteor shower. This invisible rain will be very slow and may take months or years. At the same time, cometary dust from ISON is expected to create "silver clouds" - brilliant night clouds over the Earth's poles, which will glow with blue light.

Don't miss out on unforgettable sights. Comet ISON will be visible to the naked eye in both hemispheres for 2 months (from November of this year to January 2014).

Astronomy lovers in the new year will be able to witness several curious phenomena, which take place every year, such as eclipses of the Sun and Moon, as well as quite rare, such as the passage Mercury across the disk of the Sun.

A few years ago we witnessed transits of Venus across the disk of the Sun and now it's time to observe Mercury, which will also move across the solar disk from the point of view of an earthly observer. This event will take place May 9, 2016.

Expected in 2016 4 eclipses: two solar and two lunar.9th of Marchwill be observed complete, aSeptember 1 - ring solar eclipse . Observers in Russia will not see any of them in full, unlike penumbral lunar eclipses -23 March and 16 September.

One of important events in space exploration is the achievement by the American apparatus "Juno" of Jupiter, which is expected in July 2016. The device has been started August 5, 2011 and to July 2016 will have to cover the distance 2.8 billion kilometers.

This calendar indicates Moscow time(GMT+3).

Astronomical calendar 2016

JANUARY

January 2 – Earth at perihelion (the planet is closest to the Sun)

3, 4 January - Star Rain Peak quadrantides. The maximum number of meteors per hour is 40. Remains of a disappeared comet 2003 EH1 which was opened in 2003.

January 10 – New Moon at 04:30. The days near the new moon are the most suitable for stargazing due to the fact that the moon will not be visible, which means there will be no strong light pollution.


FEBRUARY

February 11 364358 km from the earth


MARCH

March 8 Jupiter is in opposition to the Sun. The best day for observing Jupiter and its satellites, since the giant Jupiter will be well illuminated by the Sun and at the same time will be at the closest distance from the Earth.

9th of March – New Moon at 04:54. total solar eclipse 130 Saros 52nd in a row. It can be observed in the north and in the center Pacific Ocean, in the east indian ocean. In Asia, including Japan and Kamchatka, and in Australia, it will be partially visible. The full eclipse can be seen from caroline islands. The total phase of the eclipse will last only 4 minutes and 9 seconds.



20th of March – Spring equinox at 07:30. Day equals night. The first day of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and the first day of autumn in the Southern Hemisphere.

March 23 - Full moon at 15:01. Penumbral moon eclipse at 14:48. Eclipse 142 Saros, number 18 of 74 eclipses in the series. Residents and guests can watch East Asia, Australia, Oceania, Eastern Russia, Alaska. The duration of the penumbral phase - 4 hours 13 minutes. In this type of eclipse, the full moon will only be partially in the Earth's shadow.


Astronomical Observations 2016

APRIL

April 22-23 - Star Rain Lyrids. constellation Lyra. comet remnants Thatcher C/1861 G1 which was opened in 1861. Due to the fact that this year the time of this shower coincides with the full moon, it will be quite difficult to observe it.


May 6-7 - Star Rain This is the Aquarids. constellation Aquarius. Is particles Halley's comet discovered in antiquity. Due to the fact that this stellar rain coincides in time with the new moon, all meteors will be clearly visible. The best time to watch rain is just after midnight.

9th May – Walkthrough Mercury across the disk of the Sun- a rare transit, which can be called a "mini-eclipse" of the Sun by Mercury. This event takes place on average once every 7 years(13-14 times per century) and can be observed either in May or November. Mercury, the Sun and the Earth will then be in one straight line, so the inhabitants of the Earth will be able to see how Mercury passes against the background of the Sun's disk.

The last time Mercury passed through the disk of the Sun November 8, 2006. Next time this phenomenon will take place November 11, 2019, and then only after 20 years - in 2039.

The transit of Mercury across the solar disk will be clearly visible to observers in North Central and South America, parts of Europe, Asia and Africa. The transit can be fully observed in Eastern parts of the USA and South America.


22nd of May Mars is in opposition to the Sun. Mars will be well lit by the Sun and will be at its closest distance to Earth, so this is best time for observing the Red Planet. With a medium telescope, dark details of the planet's reddish surface can be seen.

Astronomical phenomena 2016

JUNE

June 3 Saturn is in opposition to the Sun. The distant planet Saturn on this day will be best seen due to the fact that it will be located at the closest distance from the Earth.

June 3 – Moon at perigee: distance -361142 km from the earth

21st of June - Day of the summer solstice at 01:45. The longest day of the year. The first day of summer in the Northern Hemisphere, and the first day of winter in the Southern Hemisphere.


JULY

4th of July – Earth at aphelion from the Sun (The planet is at its furthest distance from the Sun)

4th of July Spaceship "Juno" will reach Jupiter.

This automatic interplanetary station must reach its target - the planet Jupiter, having overcome the distance in 5 years 2.8 billion kilometers. It should enter the orbit of the giant planet and, in about 1 Earth year, make 33 full turns around the planet. The task of the station is to study the atmosphere and magnetic field Jupiter. Juno is planned to remain in the orbit of the giant until October 2017 and then burn up in the planet's atmosphere.

June 13 – Moon at apogee: distance -404272 km from the earth

July 28-29 - Star Rain Southern Delta Aquarids. The maximum number of meteors per hour is 20. Radiant - area constellation Aquarius. Is the wreckage Comets Marsten and Kracht.


AUGUST

August 12-13 - Star Rain Perseids. The maximum number of meteors per hour is 60. Radiant - area constellation Perseus. Is the wreckage Comet Swift-Tuttle.

August 27 – Connection Venus and Jupiter. This is an impressive sight - the two brightest planets in the night sky will be very close to each other (0.06 degrees) and will be easily visible to the naked eye in the evening sky just after sunset.

Astronomical objects 2016

SEPTEMBER

September 1 – New Moon at 12:03. annular solar eclipse at 12:07 - 39th eclipse of 135 Saros. This eclipse can be observed in Africa, Madagascar and other parts of the equatorial and tropical latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere. The eclipse will only last 3 minutes and 6 seconds.



September 3 – Neptune in opposition to the sun. On this day, the blue planet will come closest to the Earth, so armed with a telescope, it can be observed best. However, only the most powerful telescope can show any details. The planet Neptune is not visible to the naked eye.

16 of September - Full moon at 22:05. Penumbral moon eclipse at 21:55. Refers to 147 Sarosu number 9 out of 71 eclipses in the series. Best of all, this eclipse can be observed in Europe, Russia, Africa, Asia, Australia. In total, the eclipse will last 3 hours 59 minutes.


September 22nd - Autumn equinox at 17:21. Day equals night. It is the first day of autumn in the Northern Hemisphere and the first day of spring in the Southern Hemisphere.

A pair of comets with very similar orbits are approaching Earth. While both keep a safe distance between each other, one of them has a record close span.

A pair of comets in very close orbits are approaching Earth, and astronomers are preparing to use radio telescopes to get radar images, while advanced amateurs can capture images of each of the comet twins. Comet 252P/LINEAR 12 is already known to pass Earth on March 21, 2016 at a distance of 3,290,000 miles (5.3 million kilometers). This is about 14 times the distance from the Earth to the Moon and, by itself, does not set any records.

Astronomers Matti Knight, Michael C.P. Kelly and Sylvia Protopapa discovered the tail on 2016 BA14 using the Discovery Channel Telescope at the Lowell Observatory. Did comet 252P split in two? We will know about it soon.

Comet P/2016 BA14 (Pan-STARRS) will pass Earth safely on March 22, 2016, coming closer than comet 252P. The flyby of comet P/2016 BA14 will take place at a distance of 2,199,933 miles (3.5 million kilometers), or about 9 lunar distances, which is very close for a comet. In fact, Comet P/2016 BA14 will set the record as the third comet ever to pass close to our planet.

Astronomers have seen many more nearby asteroids at a closer range, but ... comets are another matter. No, there is no danger for our planet, because 9 lunar distances is a very safe distance.

What comet came closest to Earth than any other comet in the history of mankind?

First place goes to comet D/1770 L1 (Lexell). It passed only 5.9 moons in July 1770. This is approximately 1.410.100 miles (2.3 million km). So close that Charles Messier noted that the comet's coma looked about the size of four visible moons.

Astronomers calculated that comet 55P/1366 U1 (Temple-Tuttle) passed Earth in October 1366 at 8.9 lunar distances.

In May 1983 comet C/1983 H1 (IRAS-Araki-Alcock) passed at 12.2 lunar distances. So comet IRAS, which currently ranks third, will soon retire to become the fourth closest comet discovered this year (P/2016 BA14).

Since comet IRAS passed at 12.2 lunar distances, the upcoming P/2016 BA14 flight will be the closest comet in 246 years!

Will it be noticeable?

Comets will look bright as they pass close to the Sun and respond to solar heat. And although comet P/2016 BA14 will pass relatively close to our planet, its close distance to the Sun will make it very dim. So you can't see it with the naked eye. In addition, P/2016 BA14 is a small comet, with a nucleus size of 1411-1788 feet (430-545 meters) in diameter. If there is no difference in brightness, scientists have calculated that comet P/2016 BA14 should have 12 or 13 stars. led., which means that it can only be captured by large telescopes. The good news is that we will catch a beautiful view with a well-known orbiting telescope. Astronomer Michael Kelly of the University of Maryland said: "We gave the Hubble Space Telescope 6 orbits time to take some pictures from high resolution during close passage.

The comet's relative proximity to our planet will cause images taken by advanced amateurs and observatories to clearly show the movement of the celestial visitor, which moves through space at a speed of 31.345 miles per hour (50445 km / h).

Both comets will also be studied using radio telescopes. From March 20 to March 23, astronomers will send radio signals to Comet P/2016 BA14 using NASA's Goldstone Radar in California. These signals will bounce off the comet's nucleus and travel to the Green Bank radar in West Virginia.

The Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico has the best "radar view" of comet 252P/LINEAR, and will receive radar images of the celestial visitor April 10-18.

Will Twin Comets Produce Meteors?

Probably not. But some astronomers think there's little chance of seeing a few meteors associated with comet P/2016 BA14 on March 20, 2016. At the same time, its twin 252P/LINEAR will produce several meteors on March 28-30.

Astronomical phenomena in January of this year are striking in their unusualness and importance. In addition to privates meteor showers and a unique parade of planets, we are also waiting for an unusual guest - comet Catalina. On this occasion, astrologers have their own forecast and their own individual opinion.

What is a comet

Comets are small, not exceeding several tens of kilometers in diameter, nuclei. Roughly speaking, these are huge lumps of dust and ice. According to respected cosmologists, all famous comets come to us from a special Oort cloud located 270 billion kilometers from the Sun. There are comets that a person can see only once in a lifetime, and there are those that arrive every few years.

What is most interesting about these space objects, so this is their tail, which stretches up to 100 thousand kilometers. It's very beautiful celestial bodies, and they are extremely interesting to observe in the night sky, and often this can be done even with the naked eye.

Symbolism of comets: the opinion of astrologers

The opinion of astrologers about comets and about Catalina, which will be visible in telescopes starting around December 7, is rather ambiguous. Comet astrology dates back a lot to the ancient Maya, who paid special attention to these wandering stars. They believed that comets bring misfortune and natural disasters, that is, behind the mask of charm and beauty lies scary face troubles.

Modern look scientists are a bit similar to the opinion of Maya, but it is more positive and positive. In accordance with the teachings of modern astrologers and their predecessors, comets carry a spark of the new and unknown, but not necessarily negative. This applies primarily to those comets that are clearly visible in the night sky.

Astrologers say that the Catalina comet conflicts with the Fire Monkey, therefore, in some way it neutralizes its action. This means that the new year 2016 will start out a bit calmer. In general, the Stars are in such a position that the comet should not bring trouble this year. The combination of Capricorn and Aquarius translates energy fluctuations in a positive direction.

We remind you that Catalina will be best seen in the night sky on January 17, so it will be possible to observe it with the naked eye in the area of ​​​​the constellation Ursa Major. We hope that the comet will bring you good luck, wish you a happy January and only positive news. May the comet bring you good luck - be happy and don't forget to press the buttons and

14.01.2016 00:30

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