Showing posts with label SSGEOS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SSGEOS. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Solar System Geometry Forecast (April 10-19, 2026) | Frank Hoogerbeets

A convergence of planetary geometries, including Earth's conjunction with Mars and Neptune, is expected to produce heightened seismic activity from April 12 to 14 (Sun-Tue). The lunar peak on April 15 (Wed) is projected to generate temporal clustering of stronger earthquakes around April 16 (Thu), with potential magnitudes reaching 6–7. 
 
SSGI COMMON graph overview from April 10 to 19, 2026.
 
Subsequent planetary conjunctions from April 16 to 19 (Thu-Sun), notably Earth's alignment with Mars and Saturn, are anticipated to sustain continuous seismic unrest, potentially peaking around April 20 (Mon).

April 9 (Thu) 21:10:17, 2026 — Moon–Earth–Jupiter (0°)
April 10 (Fri) 00:00:00, 2026 — Venus–Saturn–Neptune (0°26'11")
April 11 (Sat) 11:55:30, 2026 — Mercury–Venus–Earth (90°)
 
April 12 (Sun) 09:10:04, 2026 — Venus–Earth–Neptune (135°)
April 12 (Sun) 18:05:55, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Saturn (45°)
April 12 (Sun) 18:07:38, 2026 — Venus–Earth–Saturn (135°)
 
April 13 (Mon) 05:23:27, 2026 — Earth–Mars–Neptune (0°)
April 13 (Mon) 12:15:09, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Jupiter (135°)
 
April 14 (Tue) 01:41:00, 2026 — Earth–Venus–Neptune (45°)
April 14 (Tue) 04:01:06, 2026 — Venus–Mercury–Neptune (90°)
April 14 (Tue) 09:32:32, 2026 — Venus–Mercury–Saturn (90°)
 
April 15 (Wed) 05:22:32, 2026 — Mercury–Venus–Neptune (90°)
April 15 (Wed) 15:16:39, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Mercury (0°)
April 15 (Wed) 18:45:22, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Neptune (0°)
April 15 (Wed) 22:09:21, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Mars (0°)
 
April 16 (Thu) 02:38:17, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Saturn (0°)
April 16 (Thu) 13:09:43, 2026 — Mercury–Mars–Saturn (0°)
 
April 17 (Fri) 01:58:58, 2026 — Earth–Mercury–Neptune (0°)
April 17 (Fri) 11:52:15, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Sun (New Moon) (0°)
April 17 (Fri) 17:15:53, 2026 — Mercury–Venus–Saturn (90°)
April 17 (Fri) 20:54:20, 2026 — Mercury–Venus–Mars (90°)
 
April 18 (Sat) 03:36:52, 2026 — Sun–Earth–Jupiter (90°)
April 18 (Sat) 12:32:49, 2026 — Mercury–Sun–Jupiter (0°)
 
April 19 (Sun) 00:00:00, 2026 — Venus–Saturn–Neptune (0°34'13")
April 19 (Sun) 04:41:57, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Saturn (45°)
April 19 (Sun) 06:44:49, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Venus (0°)
April 19 (Sun) 15:45:12, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Uranus (0°)
April 19 (Sun) 20:18:15, 2026 — Earth–Moon–Jupiter (45°)
April 19 (Sun) 22:37:14, 2026 — Earth–Mars–Saturn (0°)
 
Planetary positions and alignments for the interval April 12–14, 2026.
 
Frank Hoogerbeets' Solar System Geometry Survey (SSGEOS) operates on the hypothesis that specific geometric angles and alignments (0°, 45°, 90°, 135°, 180°) between planets, the Moon, and the Sun exert electromagnetic and gravitational stress on Earth’s tectonic plates to trigger major earthquakes. Its primary purpose is to provide a global earthquake forecasting system by identifying high-risk time windows through the Solar System Geometry Index (SSGI), a proprietary mathematical tool that monitors planetary conjunctions and lunar positions. The methodology treats the solar system as a massive electromagnetic generator where celestial bodies act as magnets and the Sun as an armature, creating harmonic resonances that destabilize Earth's crustal equilibrium.
See also:

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Solar System Geometry Forecast (Feb 23 - Mar 4, 2026) | Frank Hoogerbeets

 Immediate Events:
February 23: Initial Geometric Convergence: SUN-VEN-NEP align, followed by SUN-VEN-SAT.
February 24: Lunar Criticality: Tight convergence of lunar geometry involving MAR and URA, likely triggering earthquakes in high 5 to 6 magnitude range.
February 25: Seismic Peak Window: SUN-MER-JUP align, potential for larger seismic events (±1 day).
 High-Alert Window:
February 27–28: Major Electromagnetic Peak: Secondary, intense convergence of MAR-URA-JUP grouping, followed by VEN-MER-EAR alignment.
February 28: "Planetary Parade:" visual alignment of six planets (MER, VEN, SAT, NEP, URA, JUP)
.
March 1: High-Magnitude Risk: Seismic response from Feb 27/28 geometry peaks. First of two "worst-case" windows where magnitude 8 event possible.
 Full Moon & Total Lunar Eclipse Convergence:
March 2: MAR geometric connector between JUP and URA. Combined with MER-SUN-MAR alignment, seismic response in magnitude 6 range expected.
March 3: Total Lunar Eclipse & Full "Blood Moon" at 11:33 UTC: Aligns with MER-VEN-NEP conjunctions, creating massive geometric cluster.
March 4–5: Final Seismic Peak: Following eclipse and MER-VEN-SAT alignment, final activity burst expected. Second high-risk window for magnitude 7 or 8 earthquakes, depending on crustal stress levels.
 
[EAR=Earth, MOO=Moon, MER=Mercury, VEN=Venus, SUN=Sun, MAR=Mars, JUP=Jupiter, SAT =Saturn, URA=Uranus, NEP=Neptune]
 

Planetary-Lunar Geometry, February 
23-25, 2026.
 
See also:
Frank Hoogerbeets' Solar System Geometry Survey (SSGEOS) operates on the hypothesis that specific geometric angles (i.e. 0°, 45°, 90° and 135°) and alignments between planets, the Moon, and the Sun exert electromagnetic and gravitational stress on Earth’s tectonic plates to trigger major earthquakes. Its primary purpose is to provide a global earthquake forecasting system by identifying high-risk time windows through the Solar System Geometry Index (SSGI), a proprietary mathematical tool that monitors planetary conjunctions and lunar positions. The methodology treats the solar system as a massive electromagnetic generator where celestial bodies act as magnets and the Sun as an armature, creating harmonic resonances that destabilize Earth's crustal equilibrium. This remains unrecognized by the mainstream scientific community, which maintains that planetary forces are too weak to influence terrestrial seismicity and that earthquakes cannot be predicted with temporal precision.

Monday, March 11, 2024

Grand Sun-Jupiter-Uranus Conjunction | Frank Hoogerbeets

The grand Sun-Jupiter-Uranus conjunction on 13 March, 2024 (Wed) will uniquely coincide with additional conjunctions involving Mercury and Venus and also the Moon. This combination can result in large seismic activity, potentially reaching well over magnitude 8, most likely between 14 and 17 March.
 
 
 Very strong fluctuation - potential for major to great seismic event.

Ref
erence:
 
 
» The similarity between an electric generator with its carefully placed magnets and the sun with its ever-changing planets is intriguing. In the generator, the magnets are fixed and produce a constant electrical current. If we consider that the planets are magnets and the sun is the armature, we have a considerable similarity to the generator. «