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Subject Hopi Prophecy "That time is not far off. It will come when the Saquasohuh (Blue Star) Kachina dances in the plaza and removes his mask.
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CELTIC -HOPI CONNECTION




While most stars travel along together around the disk of our Milky Way, Mira is charging through it. Because Mira is not moving with the "pack," it is moving much faster relative to the ambient gas in our section of the Milky Way. It is zipping along at 130 kilometers per second, or 291,000 miles per hour, relative to this gas.
Mira, also known as Mira A, is not alone in its travels through space. It has a distant companion star called Mira B that is thought to be the burnt-out, dead core of a star, called a white dwarf. Mira A and B circle around each other slowly, making one orbit about every 500 years.

Mira is also what's called a pulsating variable star. It dims and brightens by a factor of 1,500 every 332 days, and will become bright enough to see with the naked eye in mid-November 2007. Because it was the first variable star with a regular period ever discovered, other stars of this type are often referred to as "Miras."

This is an utterly new phenomenon to us, and we are still in the process of understanding the physics involved," said study team member Mark Seibert of the Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, Calif.
Nothing of its kind has ever been observed around a star. Visible only in UV
It turns out that Mira is a true shooting star. Not a meteor breaking up in Earth's atmosphere, but a star that has been flung across the universe leaving a 13-light-year-long trail of debris and star particles. Astronomers were stunned when they observed this comet-like tail of debris.
Moving along at the speedy pace of 291,000 miles per hour, Mira has shed enough material to form over 3,000 Earth-sized planets. The left behind material could become the seeds for future planets or stars—this fact led some at NASA to dub this the 'Johnny Appleseed of the Cosmos'.
We can see the enormous trail of material deposited behind Mira as it hurls along between the stars. Like a boat travelling through water, a bow shock, or build up of gas, forms ahead of the star in the direction of its motion. Gas in the bow shock is heated and then mixes with the cool hydrogen gas in the wind that is blowing off Mira. This heated hydrogen gas then flows around behind the star, forming a turbulent wake.

Why does the trailing hydrogen gas glow in ultraviolet light? When it is heated, it transitions into a higher-energy state, which then loses energy by emitting ultraviolet light - a process known as fluorescence.


Hopi Prophecy (Spiritual visions)

"That time is not far off. It will come when the Saquasohuh (Blue Star) Kachina dances in the plaza and removes his mask. He represents a blue star, far off and yet invisible, which will make its appearance soon. The time is foretold by a song sung during the Wuwuchim ceremony.
Could Saquasohuh Kachina be Mira, the name for the "Appleseed Star". Could the internet screen be the square plaza, and for science to remove the mask of the Squasohuh Kachina in blue tones and giving her a name as Mira, is certainly the 9th Revelation of the Hopi, the arrival of the Red Kachina, as her colour is red.
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