So you joined us today to talk about asteroid, and this asteroid happens to be Chiron.
Speaker AOh, okay.
Speaker ATell us about Chiron.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BI have been using Chiron in my charts for a long time, but my knowledge of Chiron was pretty limited.
Speaker BI knew it was an asteroid, as you were saying, and that a lot of astrologers use it.
Speaker BAnd I'd often heard it called the Healer and knew that it was related to some ancient Greek mythology, but I didn't know a whole lot about it.
Speaker BAnd so I took on a project, I guess, about eight months ago that I started just sort of reading all the books and articles and watching videos on Chiron.
Speaker BMy background is academic, and so, like, when I went to do a research project, we always do what we call survey of the literature.
Speaker BSo what I really did is did a survey of the literature with Chiron to.
Speaker BTo see how astrologers are using it and what the various meanings are and to determine then how I could use it in my own life and as I consult with clients.
Speaker BSo I learned a lot of really cool things.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd you're here to share some of that with us today?
Speaker BI am.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BChiron was discovered November 1st of 1977 by an American astronomer whose name was Charles Kowal just before 10am and initially Kowal thought Chiron was an asteroid.
Speaker BBut a number of things changed over time and they begin to wonder what it really was.
Speaker BSo In December of 1977, it was classified as an asteroid and given a number, asteroid number 2060.
Speaker BHowever, it started changing in its appearance over time.
Speaker BAnd so in the 1980s, Chiron had developed a tail, and so it was reclassified as a comet.
Speaker BToday it's.
Speaker BIf you go to the NASA website, it's still classified as both an asteroid and a comet, but it's more correctly now called a centaur, which is a hybrid object.
Speaker BSo it's of.
Speaker BPart.
Speaker BPart they actually call it a dwarf planet or a planetoid, which is a subcategory of asteroid plus part comet.
Speaker BAnd I can.
Speaker BI'll go into that more when we talk about the astrological meaning of Chiron.
Speaker BBut I thought that was fascinating that it actually has multiple roles even in the sky, and it has different appearances depending on where it is, which would
Speaker Akind of tie into the centaur being half man, half horses have.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker AHalf asteroid, half comet.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BDid you have some other introductory remarks you want to make or shall I.
Speaker ANo, no, keep it rolling.
Speaker BI have a few slides for those who are going to watch this on video.
Speaker BAnd so I Wanted to, to put that up for you.
Speaker BSo what I thought I'd generally cover today is kind of the history of Chiron through its astronomy, as well as the mythological stories of Chiron and some other just things that were going on in history when it was discovered.
Speaker BAnd then talk about some key words for Chiron, what its astrological meaning is, and really how you might start to think about it in your own chart and in the charts of other people, if you are working as an astrologer.
Speaker BAll right, so we already talked just a little bit about the astronomy of Chiron.
Speaker BLike I said, today it's known as a hybrid centaur as well.
Speaker BIt's also considered to be a Kuiper Belt object.
Speaker BThere are hundreds or thousands of these Kuiper Belt objects, which are objects that are in elliptical orbit around the sun, part of our solar system.
Speaker BAnd generally they are between Jupiter and Neptune's orbits.
Speaker BChiron specific path connects.
Speaker BIt goes just inside of Saturn's orbit and then out to Uranus, past Uranus.
Speaker BSo it's very elliptical.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike an egg.
Speaker BSometimes it's closer to the sun and sometimes it's very far away.
Speaker AIs the Kuiper Belt the same thing as the asteroid belt?
Speaker BIt is an asteroid belt, but then there are other asteroids further on out.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AOh, okay.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BYeah, so there's both, but yeah, I think it was called that for a long time.
Speaker BAnd now I guess Kuiper was a person's name and I didn't bother seeing whose that was, but.
Speaker BAll right, it is called the KBO or Kuiper Belt object.
Speaker BWhat I thought was sort of cool is it's essentially a ball of dirty ice.
Speaker BAnd so when Chiron is closer to the sun, so it's within the path of Saturn, that's when it starts to melt and it develops a tail.
Speaker BAnd then as it orbits further away from the sun, out towards Uranus, it sort of freezes back up and the tail goes away.
Speaker BSo that when it was first discovered, it was tailless.
Speaker BAnd then within 20 years it developed a tail.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd now I believe it's tailless again.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo the tail appears disappear.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWhich you can imagine that made it very confusing for astronomers.
Speaker BLike, what is this thing?
Speaker AIs that a 20 year process?
Speaker BNo, it's longer than that.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BWell, the whole orbit of chiron is about 50 years.
Speaker BOkay, 49 to 51 years.
Speaker BSo it does take about 20 years to develop and then go away and then fade again.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause it's about 25 years on either.
Speaker AOkay, interesting.