A priori, la charge de preuve appartient à celui qui affirme, je serais donc en droit d'attendre que tu cites d'abord les sites et bouquins que tu sembles avoir cru aveuglément.
Toutefois, puisque je l'ai quand même sous la main, je ne vois pas de raison de jouer les bornés et de ne pas te fournir la réponse à ta question :
Astrological predictions
This article does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. (help, get involved!)
Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed.
This article has been tagged since February 2007.[NB de Poltergeist binoclard : la source de la partie qui nous intéresse, celle sur les Pléiades, est belle et bien citée : il s'agit d'un logiciel d'astronomie réputé fiable,
http://www.xs4all.nl/~sahjps/astro.html ]
Several authors have predicted a special astrological/astronomical alignment between the Galactic center in the constellation of Sagittarius, the Winter Solstice point, and the open cluster of the Pleiades. Factually, the coincidence of the Winter Solstice point (due to the precession of the Equinoxes) and the galactic center is basically true. However, the opposition of the Pleiades is not true. The Pleiades are located in the constellation of Taurus, and lie at an angle of about 150 degrees to the Galactic Center. The Pleiades would have to be located in the constellation of Gemini to be close to being in opposition, or a 180 degree angle.
Further, the proper motion of the stars in the Pleiades Cluster is such that they move across the sky relative to Earth. This takes place quite slowly as seen on the human time scale. Three million years ago the Pleiades were seen near the constellation of Cassiopeia. Three million years in the future, they will appear near the feet of Orion. This is easily validated using freeware programs such as Move A Star[15], which allows one to see the proper motion of stars over an extended period of time.
The Pleiades have never been, and never will be, in 'opposition' to the galactic center as seen from Earth
En tant qu'étudiant en physique, je ne doute pas que tu connaisses l'un ou l'autre logiciel d'astronomie qui te permettront de vérifier cela, de toute façon.
