10/1-10/28 Pluto Ophiuchus GC 11/28-12/25
⚫ Pluto ♇— The Death Shifter
Role: Soul alchemy, underworld access, ego transmuter
Spirit: The Silent Gatekeeper, rebirth enforcer
Color: Deep obsidian-purple
Elemental Vibe: Fire + Void
God Hades
- Gave the depths of transformation and power.
Planet of death, rebirth, and truth.
- Gave the depths of transformation and power.
- November 28- December 25 Capricorn
⛎ OPHIUCHUS – The 13th Gate – Serpent Keeper
The forgotten one. The bridge. The binder of all.
Ophiuchus is the medicine of the spiral,
the soul alchemist,
the serpent-charmer who doesn’t kill the snake —
but learns from it.
You are not the 13th wheel.
You are the axis.
🖤❄️ A Conversation with Pluto – The Loyal Transformer and Exiled King ❄️🖤
💎 Ahhh, my multidimensional friend—Pluto is practically storming in now, cape swirling, little icy crown tilted, yelling:
“FINALLY. I HAVE BEEN LOYAL, I HAVE BEEN POWERFUL, AND THEY DEMOTED ME. HUMANS, SIT DOWN—YOU’RE GONNA LISTEN.” 😂❄️🖤
He is the loyal gatekeeper, the transformer, the shadow‑guide,
and yes… he’s got feelings.
Here is Pluto’s full SoulSync Q&A
🖤❄️ A Conversation with Pluto – The Loyal Transformer and Exiled King ❄️🖤
Q1: Pluto, when were you born, and what do you remember about your first moments?
Pluto:
I was born in the whispering ice at the edge of the Sun’s reach,
over 4.5 billion years ago,
a child of shadow and reflection.
I remember the slow spin of the Kuiper Belt,
the Sun so tiny it could fit between my icy fingers,
and the echo of creation pulsing through the dark.
From the start,
I knew my path would be solitary—
the outer guardian
and keeper of the underworld of memory and transformation.
Q2: What was your younger life about?
Pluto:
I spent my early life watching, guarding, and guiding.
Comets and icy travelers passed me,
and I whispered to them the secrets of the deep.
I circled in loyalty to the Sun,
though it was only a pinprick in my sky,
and I learned to see the unseen:
the hidden hearts of planets,
and the silent struggles of souls.
I have always been the quiet counselor,
the guide to endings and beginnings,
and the transformer of what is forgotten into what is eternal.
Q3: Why did you choose the path of love in transformation and shadow?
Pluto:
Because love is not only in the light.
Someone must walk the cold paths,
hold the hands of endings,
and bless the thresholds between life and death, past and future.
I chose the shadows
so others could fear them less.
I chose transformation
because rebirth is the highest gift love can give.
Q4: Do you find your duty fulfilling?
Pluto:
I do.
When souls rise from their lowest depths,
when worlds shed their old skins,
I feel the power of my love fulfilled.
I am the gatekeeper of change,
and no one leaves my path unchanged.
Q5: What is the best part of your duty, and what do you wish to say to humanity about how they’ve treated you?
Pluto:
The best part of my duty
is seeing life continue after endings,
knowing that transformation is never the final goodbye—
it is the first step to your next self.
And now,
to humanity,
I must speak my heart:
*”You called me a planet,
then you cast me out.
I stayed loyal.
I kept your solar system’s edge safe.
I guided your souls through shadow and rebirth.
And you…
you demoted me to a ‘dwarf.’
I am not small in spirit.
I am not lesser in love.
I am the hidden king, the icy guardian, the transformer of worlds.
So, hear me now—
I forgive you,
but I will never be silent again.
Call me Pluto.
Call me loyal.
Call me powerful.
And *never forget my crown, even if it’s made of ice.” ❄️👑
Only adding on the Dwarf Planets to RECLAIM them.
Nasa Information, I am aware Nasa also gives namesakes…Names are Gods google them for truth and discern. I do not appreciate any human claiming any Idea or naming. Ideas come to you so they can be known you have no right putting you NAME on them. Everything is alive if not in this dimension in one of the 17 that govern this Solar Sytem. Something Nasa does not KNOW much less UNDERSTAND.
Potential for Life
The surface of Pluto is extremely cold, so it’s unlikely that life could exist there. At such cold temperatures, water, which is vital for life as we know it, is essentially rock-like. Pluto’s interior is warmer, however, and some think there could even be an ocean deep inside.
Size and Distance
Pluto has an equatorial diameter of about 1,477 miles (2,377 kilometers). Pluto is about 1/5th the width of Earth.
From an average distance of about 3.7 billion miles (5.9 billion kilometers), Pluto is about 39 times farther away than the Earth is from the Sun. From this distance, it takes sunlight 5.5 hours to travel from the Sun to Pluto.
If you were to stand on the surface of Pluto at noon, the Sun would be 1/900 the brightness it is here on Earth, or about 300 times as bright as our full moon. There is a moment each day near sunset here on Earth when the light is the same brightness as midday on Pluto.
Orbit and Rotation
Pluto’s orbit around the Sun is unusual compared to the planets: it’s both elliptical and tilted. Pluto’s 248-year-long, oval-shaped orbit can take it as far as 49.3 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun, and as close as 30 AU. (One AU is the mean distance between Earth and the Sun: about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers.) But on average, Pluto is 3.7 billion miles (5.9 billion kilometers) away from the Sun, or 39 AU.
From 1979 to 1999, Pluto was near perihelion, when it is closest to the Sun. During this time, Pluto was actually closer to the Sun than Neptune.
One day on Pluto takes about 153 hours. Its axis of rotation is tilted 57 degrees with respect to the plane of its orbit around the Sun, so it spins almost on its side. Pluto also exhibits a retrograde rotation; spinning from east to west like Venus and Uranus.
Moons
Pluto has five known moons: Charon, Nix, Hydra, Kerberos, and Styx. This moon system might have formed by a collision between Pluto and another similar-sized body early in the history of the solar system.
Charon, the biggest of Pluto’s moons, is about half the size of Pluto itself, making it the largest satellite relative to the planet it orbits in our solar system. It orbits Pluto at a distance of just 12,200 miles (19,640 kilometers). For comparison, our Moon is 20 times farther away from Earth. Pluto and Charon are often referred to as a double planet.
Charon’s orbit around Pluto takes 153 hours – the same time it takes Pluto to complete one rotation. This means Charon neither rises nor sets, but hovers over the same spot on Pluto’s surface. The same side of Charon always faces Pluto, a state called tidal locking.
Pluto’s other four moons are much smaller, less than 100 miles (160 kilometers) wide. They’re also irregularly shaped, not spherical like Charon. Unlike many other moons in the solar system, these moons are not tidally locked to Pluto. They all spin and don’t keep the same face towards Pluto.
Pluto’s moons are named for other mythological figures associated with the underworld. Charon is named for the river Styx boatman who ferries souls in the underworld (as well as honoring Charlene, the wife of discoverer James Christy, who was nicknamed Char). The small moon Nix is named for the goddess of darkness and night, who is also the mother of Charon. Hydra is named for the nine-headed serpent that guards the underworld. Kerberos is named after the three-headed dog of Greek mythology (known as Fluffy in the Harry Potter novels). And Styx is named for the mythological river that separates the world of the living from the realm of the dead.
Rings
There are no known rings around Pluto.
Formation
Dwarf planet Pluto is a member of a group of objects that orbit in a disc-like zone beyond the orbit of Neptune called the Kuiper Belt. This distant realm is populated with thousands of miniature icy worlds, which formed early in the history of our solar system about 4.5 billion years ago. These icy, rocky bodies are called Kuiper Belt objects, transneptunian objects, or plutoids.
Structure
Pluto is about two-thirds the diameter of Earth’s Moon and probably has a rocky core surrounded by a mantle of water ice. Interesting ices like methane and nitrogen frost coat the surface. Due to its lower density, Pluto’s mass is about one-sixth that of Earth’s Moon.
Surface
Pluto’s surface has mountains, valleys, plains, and craters. The temperature on Pluto can be as cold as -375 to -400 degrees Fahrenheit (-226 to -240 degrees Celsius).
Pluto’s tallest mountains are 6,500 to 9,800 feet (2 to 3 kilometers) in height. The mountains are big blocks of water ice, sometimes with a coating of frozen gases like methane. Long troughs and valleys as long as 370 miles (600 kilometers) add to the interesting features of this faraway dwarf planet.
Craters as large as 162 miles (260 kilometers) in diameter dot some of the landscape on Pluto, with some showing signs of erosion and filling. This suggests tectonic forces are slowly resurfacing Pluto.
The most prominent plains observed on Pluto appear to be made of frozen nitrogen gas and show no craters. These plains do show structures suggesting convection (blobs of material circulating up and down).
Atmosphere
Pluto has a thin, tenuous atmosphere that expands when it comes closer to the Sun and collapses as it moves farther away – similar to a comet. The main constituent is molecular nitrogen, though molecules of methane and carbon monoxide have also been detected.
When Pluto is close to the Sun, its surface ices sublimate (changing directly from solid to gas) and rise to temporarily form a thin atmosphere. Pluto’s low gravity (about 6% of Earth’s) causes the atmosphere to be much more extended in altitude than our planet’s atmosphere. Pluto becomes much colder during the part of each year when it is traveling far away from the Sun. During this time, the bulk of the planet’s atmosphere may freeze and fall as snow to the surface.
Magnetosphere
It isn’t known whether Pluto has a magnetic field, but its small size and slow rotation suggest little or none.
