What is included in the 2016 ephemeris?
For each month of 2016, the ephemeris shows the tropical longitude of the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto and North Node of the Moon; sign ingresses (planets or bodies changing sign); planetary stations; lunar ingresses; Void Moon; lunar phases; and eclipses. Note: Time is Midnight Eastern Time.
What time does the Moon enter Scorpio in 2016?
For Pacific Time, subtract 3 hours from the given times. For example, the Moon enters Scorpio on January 3rd at 11:36 AM Pacific Time. See the 2016 Moon Calendar (PDF), which includes the daily positions of the Moon, Moon sign changes (ingresses), Sun-Moon angle, Moon age, and dates/times for the Moon phases.
What is the Moon sign for January in 2016?
See the 2016 Moon Calendar (PDF), which includes the daily positions of the Moon, Moon sign changes (ingresses), Sun-Moon angle, Moon age, and dates/times for the Moon phases. 23 Virgo 09 D on January 1st.
What are the planets in 2016 for horoscope?
Conjunctions to Inner Planets in 2016: 11 Sagittarius 09 D on January 1st. 21 Sagittarius 16 D on December 31st. Retrograde from March 25th to August 13th. Saturn is in Sagittarius all year. Other Minor Outer Planet Flowing Aspects of Saturn in 2016: 16 Aries 34 D on January 1st. 20 Aries 33 D on December 31st.
What is the difference between DE406 and DE405 ephemeris?
DE405 is a larger and slightly more precise ephemeris than DE406, but DE406 should be more than accurate enough for most usages. The differences are explained in this document: To use JPL ephemeris, you need to place in Celestia’s data directory and name it ‘jpleph.dat’.
What is the dynamical model for the ephemeris de440?
The dynamical model for DE440 includes a frictional damping between the fluid core and the elastic mantle. This damping term is not suitable for extrapolation more than several centuries into the past. In order to cover a longer time span, the ephemeris DE441 was integrated without the lunar core/mantle damping term.
What is the latest JPL ephemeris?
The latest JPL ephemeris with fully consistent treatment of planetary and lunar laser ranging data is DE440 (Park et al., 2021). The dynamical model for DE440 includes a frictional damping between the fluid core and the elastic mantle.