Last updated: June 8, 2026

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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

1.50°
0.5° tight3.0° wide

Computing the sky for Tuesday, June 9, 2026

What is a Uranian ephemeris?

A Uranian ephemeris shows where the planets and the eight Trans-Neptunian points sit on a given date, together with the midpoints they form. Uranian astrology, developed by Alfred Witte and the Hamburg School in the 1920s, reads charts through midpoints rather than classical aspects, so an ephemeris built for it foregrounds the midpoint tree and the 90-degree dial instead of a sign-by-sign list.

This tool casts the sky for any date you choose, with no birth data. It plots the Sun, Moon, and planets alongside the Trans-Neptunian points, folds them onto the 90-degree dial, and detects every planetary picture within your orb. Because you can step the date forward one day at a time, it answers the question practitioners actually ask: where are the TNP midpoints heading, and when does a moving body reach one.

Why the Trans-Neptunian points sit still

The Trans-Neptunian points move at a glacial pace. Cupido, the fastest, advances about 1.4 degrees in a year; Hades, Kronos, Apollon, Admetos, Vulcanus, and Poseidon are slower still. Over the span of a few weeks their positions, and the midpoints between them, hardly change. That is why a day-by-day Uranian view is really a study of motion against a fixed backdrop.

The movement comes from the fast bodies. The Moon travels roughly 13 degrees a day and the Sun about 1, so as you step the date they sweep across the standing Trans-Neptunian structure, completing a midpoint picture for a day or two and then leaving it. Watching for the day a transiting body reaches a Trans-Neptunian midpoint is the heart of the technique. For the natal version of the same scan, see the planetary picture scanner.

About these positions

The visible planets and angles are computed from the same high-precision ephemeris the rest of the site uses. The eight Trans-Neptunian points (Cupido, Hades, Zeus, Kronos, Apollon, Admetos, Vulcanus, and Poseidon) are calculated from their conventional Hamburg School orbital elements using local Keplerian approximations calibrated against Swiss Ephemeris reference positions. They are optional interpretive factors, not observed physical bodies, so different sources can disagree by a few arcminutes.

Add a time and a place only if you want the angle-based Basic Five axes, which depend on the Ascendant and Midheaven. For the general sky on a date, the midpoint tree stands on its own. To anchor a midpoint to your own chart, start from the Sun/Moon midpoint calculator.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I see Trans-Neptunian midpoints for a future date?

Pick any date in the calculator above, including dates years ahead, and it computes the sky for that day: every planet and Trans-Neptunian point folded onto the 90-degree dial, the full midpoint tree, and the planetary pictures that are active. Use the previous-day and next-day buttons to step forward one day at a time, or jump straight to a date with the picker. No birth details are required.

Why do the Trans-Neptunian points barely move from day to day?

The eight hypothetical planets move very slowly. Cupido, the fastest, travels only about 1.4 degrees in a whole year; Hades, Kronos, Apollon, Admetos, Vulcanus, and Poseidon are slower still. So the structure they form is a near-static scaffold. The day-to-day change you see when you step the date comes from the fast bodies sweeping across that scaffold: the Moon covers roughly 13 degrees a day and the Sun about 1, completing and leaving midpoint pictures as they go.

Do I need a birth time or location?

No. Planet and Trans-Neptunian positions are geocentric, so the midpoint tree and the dial are fully defined by the date alone, computed for noon Universal Time. A time and place are optional: add them only when you want the angle-based Basic Five axes (Meridian and Ascendant), which is the case if you are casting an event chart for a precise moment rather than reading the general sky for a day.

How far into the future can I look?

Any date from 1850 through 2149. That is the span of the ephemeris behind the tool. Because each lookup is a single day that you can step forward freely, there is no limit on how many days you scan.

Where do the Trans-Neptunian positions come from?

Augurine computes the eight Hamburg School factors (Cupido, Hades, Zeus, Kronos, Apollon, Admetos, Vulcanus, and Poseidon) from their conventional orbital elements using local Keplerian approximations calibrated against Swiss Ephemeris reference positions. They are optional interpretive factors, not observed physical bodies, so sources can differ by a few arcminutes. The visible planets and angles are computed from the JPL-grade ephemeris the rest of the site uses.

What is a planetary picture?

A planetary picture is a midpoint equation, written A/B = C, meaning the midpoint of two factors A and B falls on a third factor C. It is the core unit of Uranian and cosmobiology reading: the blend of A and B expresses through C. The tool detects every picture in the sky within your chosen orb and sorts them so the most exact read first.

Track a midpoint as it perfects.

Stepping the date by hand shows you where the structure is heading. Create a free account to save charts, follow live transits, and replay how a Trans-Neptunian midpoint built over time.

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