POLARIS METHOD AKA THE NORTH STAR METHOD!
Paano ba ma apply ang Polaris Method sa remapping strategy para sa pag trace ng Japanese treasure burial layout? Talaga bang ginagamit ito ng mga Japanese engineers sa pag gawa ng sketch plan para sa blueprint ng kanilang treasure map? Ano ang basihan pagdating sa area na masabi mong Polaris Method ang ginagamit na set up para sa pagtago ng kanilang mga ninanakaw na mga kayamanan? Andaming tanong pero wala pa tayong isasagot dyan kasi kelangan pa natin e memorize ang Single Compass Eight Trigrams and Elemental Method, Earthly Branches Method, Clock and Compass Method, Sun and Shadow Method, at iba pa hahaha!🤣🤣🤣 Baka sa susunod na taon ay pwede na natin talakayin ang topic na ito mga utol. Sa ngayon ay alamin muna natin ang scientific and astronomical status ng North Star. Kung ang basihan natin sa pag remap during daytime ay ang SUN dahil alam natin ang alignment of movement nya na from East to West, sa gabi naman ay hindi na natin sya makikita dahil andyan na si Moon at mga Stars kapag walang clouds or rain! At dito naging bida si Mister Polaris dahil sya ang ating gabay kung saan ang North Pole. Kaya gawin natin syang kaibigan para gabayan tayong mga explorers! Basahin ang oracion sa baba buddies!😂😂😂
Polaris is the proper name for what is often referred to as the North Star. For several thousand years it has served as a signpost in the sky and points northward to all those who view it. Of all the stars it is unique because it appears to be almost stationary in the sky while all the other stars appear to rotate around it.
Polaris is about as close to the north celestial pole as it will ever get. The celestial pole is an imaginary line passing from the South Pole of the earth thru the North Pole and then extending onward towards the starry background. Because our earth wobbles slowly like a top, Polaris will slowly be replaced as the North Star by the Star Vega in about 12 thousand years. Then after another 12 thousand years, it will again assume its rightful place as our North Star.
During the month of May, the big dipper rides high in the northern sky directly above Polaris in the early evening. By drawing an imaginary line through the two end stars Merak and Dubhe on the bowl of the big dipper and then downward you will find Polaris about halfway up the northern sky. Polaris belongs to the constellation Ursa Minor and helps form a small asterism called the little dipper.
How do I find the North Star? As the seasons change, so do the stars visible in the sky. But from the northern hemisphere, one star is constant. The North Star, or Polaris to give it its official name, is so-called because it is positioned almost exactly above our North Pole, in line with the Earth’s rotational axis. As the Earth rotates, Polaris stays almost fixed, while the other stars appear to rotate around it. Polaris is actually three stars, but they’re locked in a mutual orbit and appear to us as one star in the constellation Ursa Minor or the Little Bear. The largest of these is a yellow supergiant with over five times the mass and more than 1,000 times the brightness of our Sun. It’s roughly 400 light-years away, but is still around the 50th brightest star in the night sky.
Wherever you are in the northern hemisphere, you’ll be able to see Polaris. The constellation Ursa Major (Great Bear) offers the easiest way to find it. This is home to the famous, pan-shaped pattern of stars (asterism) known as the Plough in the UK and the Big Dipper in the US. Locate this asterism by looking for the four bright stars that mark the pan’s bowl, and the three stars that mark the handle. Now imagine a straight line passing up through the two stars on the pan that are furthest from the handle. If you continue this line until you find a distinctively bright star, you've found the North Star! Earth’s axis is tilted, and it moves around like a gyroscope in a slow process called precession. This means that in a couple of thousand years’ time, Polaris will no longer be the North Star. That honour will instead go to Gamma Cephei, a binary star system in the constellation Cepheus. Excerpted insights for explorers to ponder! Tabete nete tanken suru!

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