The Moon's Movement Past Venus

The above picture is of the Moon on two successive nights, yesterday and the day before, relative to Venus, which has been going through its "evening star" process before rushing past the Earth and becoming the "morning star". These cycles repeat every 8/5 or 1.6 practical years of 365 days. The Venus cycle is based upon the Fibonacci number series, 0 0 1 2 3 5 8 13 etc since its orbit around the Sun is 8/13 years and it's synodic period 8/5 years.
Why does it say 13.368 DAYS on the photo? Because this is the distance the Sun travels in 13.368 days.
What is happening? Since the Moon orbits the Earth every 27.321 days, the lengthy evening star phenomenon of Venus sees the Moon move past it (as above) on a number of such orbits. When nicely aligned the "star and crescent" symbol is naturally formed, as in Pakistan flag on right, noting also that the star is five pointed just as Venus repeats behaviour 5 times in eight years. As drawn however, the picture is of a waning Moon and morning star rather than evening star.
How is this calculated? If we divide the solar year by 27.321, the (lunar orbital period or LOP), then we see that the average number of LOPs in a year is 13.368544. However, if the lunar orbit is seen as traversing the 365.242 DAYS of the Sun's daily angular motion, but in the shorter LOP, then we can know that the Moon moves, per day, 13.268 DAYS of angular motion. [A DAY is slightly smaller than a degree since a degree is 1/360th of a complete circle whilst a DAY is 1/365.242th of a circle.]
This technique of using DAYS to measure the motion of celestial objects seen from Earth is key to unlocking the numerosity of the planets because it is the natural system of measure for geocentric astronomy. Pushing the boat out one step farther, the design of the celestial system is revealed as a numerical creation. For more on this read Matrix of Creation, and I will be adding more details of how the calculations are done.
The Relation between Lunar Orbit and Month
The orbital period of 27.321 days is often confused with the lunar month of 29.53 days which itself is often confused with the calendar month (named after the Moon) and some popular idea that the month is 28 days long. If we divide the solar year by the lunar month then the number of lunar months in a year is 12.368259. Note the similarity to 13.368, it is virtually identical. The reason for this lies in the fact that in a year the Sun has gone once around the Earth along the ecliptic and that the lunar month is caused by the illumination of the Moon by the Sun. This means that the number of lunar months per year must be one less than the the number of lunar orbits.
This has consequences within the picture above. The left hand moon has waxed one day beyond the Moon from the day before, on the right, because the Sun has moved away from the Moon by 13.368 DAYS minus the 1 DAY the Sun has advanced; in the same direction as the Moon. Thus the increase in distance between Sun and Moon is 12.368 DAYS per day whilst the movement of the Moon relative to the (fixed sphere of) stars is 13.368 DAYS per day.
The Relation between Lunar Node, the Day and the Year
For more on the DAY angular measure and what it reveals about the Moon's node and its synchronicity to the Earth day (at this epoch!) see Synchronicity of the Earth’s Rotation with the Moon’s Orbital Cycles and Solar Year.

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