So far we have known that the horoscope has 12 signs, but recently, NASA Space Agency, talks about the existence of the 13th horoscope sign, called Ophiuchus.

According to NASA, the Babylonians identified 13 constellations in the zodiac, but rejected the sign of the star Ophiuchus as it did not match the rotation of the earth.

Who owns the new sign?

This sign could be the horoscope of those born between November 29 and December 17 and if used as an official star sign today, it would shift the dates of other horoscope signs as well.

This discovery has been accompanied by mixed reactions, so NASA has been forced to announce that it has not created a 13th zodiac sign, as this sign has always existed.

The existence of the constellation Ophiuchus - dating back to the Babylonians more than 3,000 years ago - is not something recently discovered, but has returned to attention in recent news reports.

This prompted NASA to reprint a 2016 post in response to allegations by astonished star observers.

"Here at NASA, we study astronomy, not astrology," the space agency said in a blog post. "We have not changed any sign of the Zodiac, we just did the math."

The zodiac is an area in space that includes the Earth and its rotation around the sun over a year. It also contains the stars that make up the constellations of the Zodiac. NASA explained that the Babylonians divided the Zodiac into 12 equal parts, choosing a constellation for each month of its 12-month calendar. But there was a problem.

"Even according to ancient Babylonian stories, there were 13 constellations in the zodiac," NASA explained. "So they chose one, Ophiuchus, to leave him out."