The Cosmic Tilt (Obliquity)
Equator vs Ecliptic Planes
Study how the rotational axis inclination influences season variables directly.
Simulation Controls
Celestial Equator vs Ecliptic
Click on the Green Equinox Nodes to view precise geometric boundaries.
Interactive Precession & Conversion
Calculated Ayanamsha:24.29°
*Drift rate: ~50.29 arc-seconds / year.
1. The Obliquity of the Ecliptic (The Cosmic Tilt)
The Earth does not spin "upright" relative to its orbit around the Sun. It is tilted by approximately 23.44 degrees. This tilt, known in Sanskrit as Parama-kranti, is the reason we have seasons and is the primary constant in astronomical calculations.
The Intersection of Two Vrittas (Circles)
In the sky, we track two primary "Great Circles":
- The Vishuva-vritta (Celestial Equator): The projection of Earth's equator into space.
- The Kranti-vritta (The Ecliptic): The apparent path of the Sun (Ravi-marga) around the Earth.
Because of the tilt, these two circles intersect at only two points: the Vishuvats (Equinoxes).
- Vernal Equinox (Spring): Occurs around March 20/21. The Sun crosses the celestial equator from South to North. This marks the beginning of the Tropical zodiac at 0° Aries.
- Autumnal Equinox (Fall): Occurs around September 22/23. The Sun crosses from North to South, marking 0° Libra (180° Longitude).
Values and Precession: While the Tropical longitudes are fixed, the physical positions against the stars shift by about 50.3 arc-seconds per year due to the Precession of the Equinoxes (Ayanamsha). This is why the Vernal Equinox no longer aligns with the first star of the constellation Aries in the sky.
Mathematical Impact: Converting a planet's position from Equatorial coordinates (Right Ascension/Declination) to Ecliptic coordinates (Longitude/Latitude) requires solving a spherical triangle where one side is always the 23.44° obliquity (ε).
The value of ε is not static; it decreases by approximately 0.47 arcseconds per year:
Tropical vs. Sidereal Math
In Vedic astrology, we use the Sidereal Zodiac, which subtracts the Ayanamsha (shift due to precession) from the Tropical position:
Based on sacred traditions. May divine grace be with you.