Perseus' address

The star Algol B orbits Algol A. This animation was compiled from 55 images taken by the Chara interferometer

NGC 1260 and its neighbors

PERSEUS LTD. INN 7710421006 , OGR 1027739318881

private 1
MINIMUM private 1 (1 MONTH)
AT LEAST 990 ₽ – 500 490 ₽ 1 MONTH benchmark rate + customer base 100

private 12
MINIMUM private 12 (12 MONTHLY)
AT LEAST 4900₽ – 1910 2990 ₽ 12 MONTHS tariff comparison + customer base 1,000

main activity 32.50 Manufacture of medical instruments and devices All activities (11)

Additional OKVED

Address of registered office Registered office address 107065, Moscow, 14 K.2, Ussurinskaya str.
Received on 03/19/2010
For construction control

Director General of the legal entity Address of registered office general director Evgeniy Dmitrievich Cherepov Available TIN 772074477236 with effect from 10/21/2008.

Special tax treatment Simplified tax regime (from December 31, 2021) Statistical Codes
OKPO 58664325
OCTOBER 45305000000
OKATO 45263564000
OKOGU 4210014
OKOPF 12300
OKFS 16
Data from the SME register
Small company, 16-100 people Register of Beneficiaries
Not registered

Register of bad suppliers
Not registered Register of Terrorists and Extremists ░░░░░░░░ (via ROSFINMONITORING) Register of Foreign Agents ░░░░░░░░

Register of processors of personal data (by ROSFINITORING)
Register of Personal Data Operators (via RCN)
Registration number 77-22-092129 from 03.10.2022.
Date of start of processing 08/31/2022.
Purpose of processing the personal data

Persei specialized shopping mall for children in Akademika Yangelya

Information about the organization Persei Specialty Shopping Center for Children at Akademika Yangelya: phone numbers, exact location address, map, opening hours, description and scope of activities.

Operating mode: daily, 10:00-20:00

Contact Phones: +7 (495) 980-21-07

Official site: http://www.perseybaby.ru

help and advice

The Perseids - the most famous meteor shower

Meteor shower at the Perseids

The Perseid meteor shower is the brightest event of the summer. It can be observed on August nights in the constellation Perseus, which we are looking at here. This rain occurs when Earth passes through a cloud of fine dust particles, the remains of the Swift-Tuttle comet. These fine particles, which are comparable in size to grains of sand, burn up very quickly in our atmosphere and draw attention to a kind of star shower. The intensity of the beam gradually increases and then decreases again.

Comet Swift-Tuttle

Comet Swift-Tuttle

Comet Swift-Tuttle itself only approaches our planet once every 135 years, with its tail 'hitting' Earth every year. As the comet approaches the sun, it hurls chunks of ice and dust into space. As they move away from the sun, they enter our atmosphere and burn up, twinkling like stars in the night sky. The Perseids are usually observed from mid to late August. An observer can then count an average of 60 meteors per hour.

Story

Since this constellation is quite old and was described by a Greek scientist, it stands to reason that the history of its name goes back to ancient Greek myths. On ancient maps this constellation, while not the brightest (its stars are only second or third magnitude) but easily visible to the human eye, was depicted as a man holding a round object. This man was the mythological hero of ancient Greece, Perseus.

Perseus, drawing by John Hevelius in his Atlas of the Constellations

Perseus, drawing by Ian Hevelius from his Atlas of the Constellations

Surrounding the constellation in question are other equally well-known constellations with mythological antecedents - Pegasus and Cassiopeia, Cepheus and Andromeda. Together they form a group of constellations that share a common history with the legend of Perseus. A little further away is Keita, another ancient constellation directly related to the story of Perseus.

According to legend, the mythological hero Perseus was the child of Zeus the thunderer and the mortal woman Danaë. Perseus' mother had a suitor - Polydectus - who, in order to get rid of her stepson, sent him to get a wedding present in the form of the head of the Gorgon Medusa. Not without the help of the gods - the wise Athena and Hermes, the guide - the young man managed to kill the snake monster. On his way home, Perseus manages to save a princess named Andromeda chained to a rock from a sea monster (the whale). When he returned home alive and unharmed and gave the king the promised head of the gorgon, he only aroused his anger. So Perseus turned him into a piece of stone using the same head of the Gorgon. Today Perseus is in the sky next to Andromeda, who has become the hero's consort.

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