Tomorrow, Wednesday, July 12, the world will witness a conjunction of the Moon and Jupiter, as the Moon will rise with Jupiter (the largest planet in the Solar System) on that day. On this day, we can see them with the unaided eye in the eastern sky around 1:45 a.m., and the view remains visible until they disappear from the intensity of early morning twilight as a result of sunrise. Dr Ashraf Tadroz, professor of astronomy at the National Institute for Astronomical Research, confirmed that the best places to watch astronomical events are in agricultural fields, beaches, deserts, grasslands and mountains. A professor of astronomy at the National Institute for Astronomical Research pointed out that there is no connection between the movement of celestial bodies and the fate of man on earth, asserting that astrology is one, if not more, than astrology. False things related to witchcraft and occult like palm reading, cup, farewell, floor opening etc. Astrology is a science but we astronomers are the first to study it. Tadros asserted that the alignment of the planets in the sky had nothing to do with the occurrence of earthquakes on Earth. If that were true, astronomers would have noticed it hundreds of years earlier, explaining that astronomical phenomena are seen as fun. If the atmosphere is clear and the sky is free of clouds, dust and steam, amateurs like to follow them and take pictures, remembering that night events do not harm human health or his daily activities on the ground. Daytime phenomena associated with the Sun are dangerous to the human eye, as viewing the Sun with the naked eye is usually very harmful to the eye.
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