Ippoletis Boiko-Slastion comet
IPPOLETIS traced the progress of the Great Comet through the heaven's sphere. He made notes of the Comet's trajectory from Lyra to the constellation of "Legawaya" (the 1-st leg away) and then - away from the Sun in the direction of "The Tweens" (Jemini) where it disappeared in February of A.D. 346.
Years later IPPOLETIS and his apprentice DIOKLETIANT lead the teams of local people who made the two sets of geoglyphs in Nasca desert (modern territory of Peru) depicting the trajectories of the Great Comet as they had appeared in A.D. 265 and A.D. 345-346.
My investigation of the photos of Nasca geoglyphs revealed that the animalistic and some other designs of those geoglyphs include a number of (mostly short) texts in combination with the rebus-like pictures, e.g. "Legawaya"=Leg Away 1, which means - the end of the first leg trajectory of the around-the-Sun orbit.
This Great Comet of A.D. 265 and A.D. 345-346 had the periodic itinerary of 80 (eighty) years which in the eleventh century was sped up by the explosion of supernova. After that this same Great Comet became known as Halley comet - the name which can be used only for these comets starting from the year of 1066.
All those Great Comets (with the iteration period of 80 years) before A.D. 1066 have to be named IPPOLETIS comets, or IPPOLETIS/Boiko-Slastion comets (combining the name of the great astronomer IPPOLETIS who registered that comet's 80-years cycle, and my last name as the rediscoverer).
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Так что остаётся вопрос о том как её именовать : толи последней кометой Ипполетиса/Бойко-Сластиона, толи первой кометой Халлея.Я склоняюсь к первому варианту, т.к. эта Великая Комета всётаки явилась в нашу солнечную систему согласно 80-тилетнему циклу.Лишь в последующем цикл этой кометы существенно сократился.
Геша Питерский 16.07.2023 18:48 Заявить о нарушении