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Your Local Sidereal Time (LST)

00:00:00

Calculating...📡

13:30 LST is statistically the sharpest window to remote view.




Your local time is --:--

Your local UTC is --:--

Your longitude is ---.---

Your location appears to be location name




Your next two weeks of daily 13:30 LST are

  1. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  2. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  3. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  4. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  5. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  6. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  7. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  8. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  9. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  10. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  11. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  12. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  13. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00
  14. Day 00 Mon @ 00:00

Why 13:30 Local Sidereal Time?

Studies show remote viewing accuracy increases up to 400% within ±1 hour of 13:30 Local Sidereal Time. During then, the Earth faces a quiet region of the Milky Way with reduced galactic radiation, creating optimal conditions for psychic phenomena. Unlike clock time which follows the Sun, sidereal time tracks Earth's rotation relative to distant stars. This means 13:30 LST occurs at different clock times throughout the year but always when your location points toward the same galactic direction, allowing you to identify optimal viewing windows regardless of the time on your watch.

Don't ask me what it is, but it's real

Physicist James Spottiswoode analyzed data from over 2,500 ESP experiments and discovered that the effect size more than quadrupled during a narrow window around 13:30 Local Sidereal Time, a finding he validated across multiple independent trial sets (1,468 initial trials + 1,015 validation trials) with the peak occurring at the same LST in both datasets. What makes this statistically significant is that the correlation involves sidereal time rather than solar time, which rules out mundane explanations like circadian rhythms or office hours. Since sidereal time relates to Earth's position relative to distant stars rather than the sun, the correlation suggests a potential connection to galactic positioning rather than daily human patterns. Spottiswoode himself acknowledges the statistical validity while lacking a causal explanation, stating "Don't ask me what it is, but it's real." The finding remains anecdotal in terms of mechanism but robust in its statistical correlation across thousands of trials.

The Hawaii Remote Viewers' Guild (HRVG) has independently noted that 13:30 LST does have a positive effect on remote viewing, with their President Glenn Wheaton confirming this observation, and the guild now considers this time window advantageous for remote viewing practice.

How your LST is calculated

Your Local Sidereal Time is calculated using a simple formula: LST = GMST + Longitude, where GMST (Greenwich Mean Sidereal Time) represents the sidereal time at the Prime Meridian. For your location:
LST = ---.--- + ---.--- = ---.--- (which converts to --:--:-- in hours).

Hyperlinks for the hyper curious

What is remote viewing? Content for hyperlinks section.

13:30 LST calendar generator