Lunar Phases AdvancedHigh Precision Lunar Phases Advanced Indicator
Our Beautiful Companion in the Night:
At New Moon, the Moon sits between Earth and the Sun. The Near side is completely dark, so the Moon is unseen (except during a solar eclipse). At Full Moon, the Near side of the Moon is on the opposite side of Earth from the Sun, so sunlight hits the entire face we see—creating that big, beautifully bright Ball in the night sky. Due to tidal locking, we never see the Far side of the moon from Earth's surface.
Right after New Moon, a thin Waxing Crescent appears low in the western sky at dusk, growing into the half-lit First Quarter, then a bulging Waxing Gibbous until reaching Full Moon which rises exactly as the Sun sets. After Full, it shrinks through Waning Gibbous, Last Quarter (half-lit visible in the early morning sky), finishing with a Waning Crescent (thin sliver again) just before disappearing at dawn for the next New Moon.
The Moon’s orbit is elliptical, so its distance from Earth varies. When Full and near Perigee(closest approach) it appears larger and up to 30% brighter leading way to the name, Super Moon. Near Apogee(farthest distance) the Moon will look smaller and dimmer, or Micro Moon. These extreme alignments tend to cluster in "seasons" because the point of closest approach slowly drifts around the orbit, completing a full cycle every 18.6 years.
Chart zoomed out to highlight the seasonal Super Moon behavior:
This indicator places markers on your chart for every New/Full Moon. Super Moon events use larger circles, Micro Moon events use smaller ones (both optional based on distance at event). There are background colors for Apogee and Perigee events, with optional diamond markers.
Chart with Full/New Moon markers and phase background colors:
Extended Functionality
This advanced version builds on the core Phase detection by adding Lunar orbit extremes with event tilt values:
Precise Perigee (closest approach) and Apogee (farthest away) markers optionally appear as red diamonds above the bar for Perigee and green diamonds below for Apogee.
Background tint shows whether the Moon is currently approaching Perigee (cyan shade) or Apogee (violet shade), giving instant visual context for distance expansion and contraction.
Chart with Apogee/Perigee markers and approaching background colors:
Accuracy:
New and Full Moon times are typically within ±few minutes
Distances are typically within ±10–100 km
Tilt values are typically within ±0.01° of astronomically true.
The Info Table expands to three columns:
Current — live phase name and live geocentric distance
Next Phase — upcoming New or Full Moon, countdown timer, and expected distance
Next Extreme — upcoming Perigee or Apogee, countdown timer, and expected distance
Settings:
Thresholds group:
"Full"/"New" checkboxes turn SuperMoon and MicroMoon individually on or off for each
Distance inputs let you set your own km cutoffs for what counts as super or micro (defaults are common values around 369,000 km and 405,000 km)
Start Date and End Date control the time range the script scans for events (default 2010–2028)
BackGround Color group:
"Current Phase" checkbox turns the Waxing/Waning background colors on or off
Color pickers let you choose your own Waxing (default purple shade) and Waning (default blue shade)
"Approaching" checkbox turns the Apogee/Perigee background colors on or off
Color pickers let you choose your own Perigee (default cyan shade) and Apogee (default violet shade)
Information group:
"Show Info Table" turns the top-right panel on or off
"(New/Full)" checkbox adds detailed labels directly on New/Full bars with user selected time-zone, distance, and Lunar tilt from Earths Ecliptic
"(Peri/Apo)" checkbox adds detailed labels directly on Peri/Apo bars with user selected time-zone, distance, and Lunar tilt from Earths Ecliptic
Drop down time-zone for label
Powered by multiple 50-term approximations of the ELP2000-82B lunar theory.
Disclaimer: The script was developed with assistance from Grok 4.1, always under human supervision and decision-making.
Lunar_cycles
Lunar Phases & DistanceHigh Precision Lunar Phases & Distance Indicator
Our Beautiful Companion in the Night:
At New Moon, the Moon sits between Earth and the Sun. The side facing us is completely dark, so the Moon is invisible (except during a solar eclipse). At Full Moon, the Moon is on the opposite side of Earth from the Sun, so sunlight hits the entire face we see—creating that big, beautifully bright Ball in the night sky.
Right after New Moon, a thin Waxing Crescent appears low in the western evening sky, growing into the half-lit First Quarter, then a bulging waxing gibbous until reaching Full Moon. After Full, it shrinks through Waning Gibbous, Last Quarter (half-lit visible in the morning sky), finishing with a Waning Crescent (thin sliver again) just before disappearing at the next New Moon.
The Moon’s orbit is elliptical, so its distance from Earth varies. When Full and near Perigee(closest approach) it appears larger and up to 30% brighter leading way to the name, Super Moon. Near Apogee(farthest distance) the Moon will look smaller and dimmer, or Micro Moon. These extreme alignments tend to cluster in "seasons" because the point of closest approach slowly drifts around the orbit, completing a full cycle every 18.6 years.
This indicator places clear markers on your chart for every exact New and Full Moon. Super Moon events use larger circles, Micro Moon events use smaller ones (both optional based on distance at event).
Chart zoomed out to highlight the seasonal behavior:
Accuracy:
New and Full Moon times are typically within ±few minutes & Distances are typically within ±10–100 km of astronomically true.
A small info table sits in the top-right corner and shows:
Current phase name (e.g., "Waxing Gibbous" or "Super Full Moon")
Live geocentric distance to the Moon right now
Name of the next New or Full Moon, with a countdown timer (days:hours:minutes)
Expected distance at that upcoming event
Settings
Thresholds group:
Two "Enable" checkboxes completely turn supermoon and micromoon highlighting on or off
Distance inputs let you set your own km cutoffs for what counts as super or micro (defaults are common values around 367,000 km and 405,000 km)
Start Date and End Date control the time range the script scans for events (default 2010–2028)
BackGround group:
"Current Phase" checkbox turns the waxing/waning background colours on or off
Colour pickers let you choose your own waxing (default soft purple) and waning (default soft blue) shades
Information group:
"Show Info Table" turns the top-right panel on or off
"(New/Full)" debug checkbox adds detailed labels directly on New/Full bars with exact UTC time and distance (useful for verification)
Powered by the open-source (telephonejack/LunarSolver/1) library using multiple 50-term approximations of the ELP2000-82B lunar theory.
Disclaimer: The script was developed with assistance from Grok 4.1, always under human supervision and decision-making.
BT AstroBT Astro Indicator — Quick Summary
BT Astro is a market context overlay that plots major astronomical timing cycles (planetary conjunctions + key time harmonics) directly on your chart to help you identify when markets are more likely to transition, accelerate, or stall .
This is not a buy/sell signal tool —it’s a timing + regime awareness layer designed to complement price/volume structure.
Key Features & Visuals
• Major Cycle Markers: clean vertical markers for high-impact events (ex: major conjunctions, eclipses)
• Toggle Controls: enable/disable event groups (ex: “Major Conjunctions”) to keep charts uncluttered
• Minimal Overlay: stays in the background—no forecasting lines, just time-based context
• Designed for Confluence: built to pair with regime/volatility/flow tools (not replace them)
How Traders Use It (Context, Not Entries)
• Timing Awareness: highlight windows where breakouts may follow through or fail more often
• Risk Adjustment: reduce size / tighten risk / stand down near major cycle windows; press only with confluence
• Regime Confirmation: use astro timing as a secondary “permission” layer when structure + flow already agree
• Discipline Filter: helps avoid forcing trades when time is misaligned, even if setups look good
Bottom Line
BT Astro does not predict direction. It adds a time-based caution/permission layer so you can trade your existing models with better context and cleaner decision-making.
Lunar Cycles Projected Forward; Moon phases into futureProjecting Lunar Cycles/ half-cycles forward in time
User sets the recent Full moon in history to anchor from; Indicator projects 1/2 cycles forward in time
//inputs//
-input number of full lunar cycles to project forward from input full moon time
-choose color/opacity/border color/text display
Moon Phases/Apogee & Perigee/Eclipses/North Node by BTThis script helps us to display date of different lunar properties on price chart. Simply following items could be used to see dates.
New moon
Full moon
Apogee
Perigee
North node
I've used following web site (fourmilab.ch) for obtaining exact dates, according to web site "All dates and times are Universal time (UTC); to convert to local time add or subtract the difference between your time zone and UTC"




