New Supernova Lights Up Leo
Big ole Texas hat tip to AC @ GLP for this. Why?
The woman is Virgo, the virgin from whose womb the Messiah would come. The Messsiah's star is Leo the lion which has always been seen in the heavens waiting to pounce and deal a fatal crushing blow to the serpent, Scorpio.
The 12 tribes of Israel were all assigned a zodiac sign. The Leo Zodiac Constellation was assigned to the tribe of Judah.
In Genesis 49: 9, 10 and in several verses in the Bible it is clear that the Messiah will come from the line of Judah.
Another example is in Revelations 5:5,
And one of the elders said to me: Weep not, behold the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the root of David, hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals thereof.
The Leo Zodiac Constellation is one of the most significant of all the zodiac constellations. http://www.demons-are-angels-to.com/leozodiacconstellation.htmlA new supernova? Darn right. Lighting up Leo? Well… not without some serious visual aid, but the fact that someone out there is watching and has invited us along for the ride is mighty important. And just who might that someone be? None other than Tim Puckett.
Less than 24 hours ago, the American Association of Variable Star Observer’s Report #222 stated:
We have been informed by Tim Puckett and by the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBET 2532, Daniel W. E. Green, Ed.) of the discovery of a bright supernova in UGC 5189A by J. Newton and Puckett, Portal, AZ, on November 3.52 UT at unfiltered magnitude 13.5. Confirming images (limiting magnitude 19.1) by Puckett on Nov. 4.50 UT showed the object at magnitude 12.9.
Spectroscopic observations (CBET 2536, Daniel W. E. Green, Ed.) by S. Benetti and F. Bufano, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova, on behalf of a larger collaboration, and by J. Vinko, University of Szeged, G. H. Marion, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and University of Texas, T. Pritchard, Pennsylvania State University, and J. C. Wheeler and E. Chatzopoulos, University of Texas, show that SN 2010jl is a type-IIn supernova. Vinko et al. also report that simultaneous measurements with Swift/UVOT in the ultraviolet bands confirm that the transient is ultraviolet-bright, as expected for young, interacting supernovae.
http://www.universetoday.com/77618/new-supernova-lights-up-leo/