Some Related Pages

Astronomy Then & Now
links to some other topics in
    ancient Hindu astronomy by this same author 

  Surya The Sun God
a brief description of Surya the ancient Hindu Sun God. 

Hindu Lunar Calendar
a brief description of the Hindu Lunar calendar

    Rahu & Ketu 
the ascending and descending nodes of the Moon and the Hindu shadow planets 

Description of the Solar Eclipse Calculation
a description of the algorithms presented in the Surya Siddhanta for calculating solar eclipses

Calculating the Circumstances of a Solar Eclispe
a Javascript program which calculates a solar eclipse using the Surya Siddyhanta algorithms


Surya Siddhanta
A 1000 Plus Year Old Hindu Text Book of Astronomy

A Very Brief History of the Surya Siddhanta

Around 300-400 B.C. Mesopotamian astronomers developed numerical methods to predict the position of the Sun, Moon and known planets based on careful observations of these objects. At about the same time Greek astronomy was beginning. The Greek Apollonius (around 200 B.C.) developed the theory of epicyclic circular motions for the planets. He proposed that the planets did not move in circles around the Earth at a uniform rate but instead they moved at a uniform rate on a small circle called an epicycle and the center of the epicycle moved at a uniform rate around the Earth. This model successfully mimicked retrograde motion of the planets where the planets appear to slow, stop, precede backwards and then more forward again against the back ground stars in the course of several months. Hipparchus (around 150 B.C.) used observational data attributed to the Mesopotamians to refine the calculations and two hundred years later Ptolemy, during the Roman imperial period, published the monumental Almagest in which he described somewhat more elaborate numerical models, still based on epicycles, which were used for the next 1400 years to predict the positions of the Sun, Moon and planets. 

During the first century A.D astronomers in India were influenced by Greek astronomical texts, and their Mesopotamian arithmetical methods. Following this contact Indian astronomy seems to have developed in near isolation. Thus, a look at ancient Hindu astronomy, which was based on the pre-Ptolemy contact, affords an interesting glimpse at very early methods of astronomical calculations. 

The oldest Sanskrit astronomical texts to survive were written around 600 A.D. One of the most notable of these text is the Surya Siddhanta which survives in a much revised version. In 1858 Ebenezer Burgess published an annotated English translation of this text, available now as Surya-Siddhanta; a text-book of Hindu astronomy, Ebenezer Burgess, Kessinger Publishing Company (http://www.kessinger-publishing.com/), 1998. Hindus believe that the Surya Siddhanta was produced by devine revelation and came from Surya the Sun God

I have written a Description of the Surya Siddhanta Solar Eclipse Calculations and a page which runs a Javascript program to Calculate the Circumstances of a Solar Eclipse using the methods of the Surya Siddhanta.

This page prepared by C.Hartley, Director of the Ernest B. Wright Observatory at the Department of Physics at Hartwick College in the City of Oneonta, NY. More things from C. Hartley at his home.

All text, drawings and photographs by C. Hartley, unless otherwise noted, copyright © 2001