Ancient India's Contribution to ASTRONOMY
"In India I found a race
of mortals living upon the Earth. but not adhering to it. Inhabiting cities, but
not being fixed to them, possessing everything but possessed by nothing".
- Apollonius Tyanaeus
- Greek Thinker and Traveller 1st Century AD
Astronomy is one area which has fascinated all mankind from the beginnings of
history. In India the first references to astronomy are to be found in the Rig Veda
which is dated around 2000 B.C. Vedic Aryans in fact deified the Sun, Stars and
Comets. Astronomy was then interwoven with astrology and since ancient times Indians
have involved the planets (called Grahas) with the determination of human fortunes.
The planets Shani, i.e. Saturn and Mangal i.e. Mars were considered inauspicious.
In the working out of horoscopes (called Janmakundali), the position of the Navagrahas,
nine planets plus Rahu and Ketu (mythical demons, evil forces) was considered. The
Janmakundali was a complex mixture of science and dogma. But the concept was born
out of astronomical observations and perception based on astronomical phenomenon.
In ancient times personalities like Aryabhatta and Varahamihira were associated
with Indian astronomy.
It would be surprising for us to know today that this science had advanced to such
an extent in ancient India that ancient Indian astronomers had recognised that stars
are same as the sun, that the sun is center of the universe (solar system) and that
the circumference of the earth is 5000 Yojanas. One Yojana being 7.2 kms., the ancient
Indian estimates came close to the actual figure.
The Calculation of Eclipses And The Earth's Circumference
In Indian languages, the science of Astronomy is today called Khagola-shastra. The
word Khagola perhaps is derived from the famous astronomical observatory at the
University of Nalanda which was called Khagola. It was at Khagola that the famous
5th century Indian Astronomer Aryabhatta studied and extended the subject.
Aryabhatta is said to have been born in 476 A.D. at a town called Ashmaka in today's
Indian state of Kerala. When he was still a young boy he had been sent to the University
of Nalanda to study astronomy. He made significant contributions to the field of
astronomy. He also propounded the Heliocentric theory of gravitation, thus predating
Copernicus by almost one thousand years.
Aryabhatta's Magnum Opus, the Aryabhattiya was translated into Latin in the 13th
century. Through this translation, European mathematicians got to know methods for
calculating the areas of triangles, volumes of spheres as well as square and cube
root. Aryabhatta's ideas about eclipses and the sun being the source of moonlight
may not have caused much of an impression on European astronomers as by then they
had come to know of these facts throught the observations of Copernicus and Galileo.
But considering that Aryabhatta discovered these facts 1500 years ago, and 1000
years before Copernicus and Galileo makes him a pioneer in this area too. Aryabhatta's
methods of astronomical calculations expounded in his Aryabhatta-siddhanta were
reliable for practical purposes of fixing the Panchanga (Hindu calendar). Thus in
ancient India, eclipses were also forecast and their true nature was perceived at
least by the astronomers.
The lack of a telescope hindered further advancement of ancient Indian astronomy.
Though it should be admitted that with their unaided observations with crude instruments,
the astronomers in ancient India were able to arrive at near perfect measurement
of astronomical movements and predict eclipses.

Indian astronomers also propounded the theory that the earth was a sphere. Aryabhatta
was the first one to have propounded this theory in the 5th century. Another Indian
astronomer, Brahmagupta estimated in the 7th century that the circumference of the
earth was 5000 yojanas. A yojana is around 7.2 kms. Calculating on this basis we
see that the estimate of 36,000 kms as the earth's circumference comes quite close
to the actual circumference known today.
The Heliocenteric Theory of Gravitation
There is an old Sanskrit Sloka (couplet) which is as follows:
"Sarva Dishanaam, Suryaha, Suryaha, Suryaha."
This couplet means that there are suns in all directions. This couplet which describes
the night sky as full of suns, indicates that in ancient times Indian astronomers
had arrived at the important discovery that the stars visible at night are similar
to the Sun visible during day time. In other words, it was recognised that the sun
is also a star, though the nearest one. This understanding is demonstrated in another
sloka which says that when one sun sinks below the horizon, a thousand suns take
its place.
This apart, many Indian astronomers had formulated ideas about gravity and gravitation.
Brahmagupta, in the 7th century had said about gravity that "Bodies fall towards
the earth as it is in the nature of the earth to attract bodies, just as it is in
the nature of water to flow". About a hundred years before Brahmagupta, another
astronomer, Varahamihira had claimed for the first time perhaps that there should
be a force which might be keeping bodies stuck to the earth, and also keeping heavenly
bodies in their determined places. Thus the concept of the existence of some tractive
force that governs the falling of objects to the earth and their remaining stationary
after having once fallen; as also determining the positions which heavenly bodies
occupy, was recognised.
It was also recognised that this force is a tractive force. The Sanskrit term for
gravity is Gurutvakarshan which is an amalgam of Guru-tva-akarshan. Akarshan means
to be attracted Thus the fact that the character of this force was of attraction
was also recognised. This apart, it seems that the function of attracting heavenly
bodies was attributed to the sun.
The term Guru-tva-akarshan can be interpreted to mean, 'to the attracted by the
Master". The sun was recognised by all ancient people to be the source of light
and warmth. Among the Aryans the sun was deifled. The sun (Surya) was one of the
chief deities in the Vedas. He was recognised as the source of light (Dinkara),
source of warmth (Bhaskara). In the Vedas he is also referred to as the source of
all life, the centre of creation and the centre of the spheres.
The last statement is suggestive of the sun being recognised as the centre of the
universe (solar system). The idea that the sun was looked upon as the power that
attracts heavenly bodies is supported by the virile terms like Raghupati and Aditya
used in referring to the sun. While the male gender is applied to refer to the sun,
the earth (Prithivi, Bhoomi, etc.,) is generally referred to as a female. The literal
meaning of the term Gurutvakarshan also supports the recognition of the heliocentric
theory, as the term Guru corresponds with the male gender, hence it could not have
referred to the earth which was always referred to as a female.
Many ancient Indian astronomers have also referred to the concept of heliocentrism.
Aryabhata has suggested it in his treatise Aryabhattiya. Bhaskaracharya has also
made references to it in his Magnum Opus Siddhanta-Shiromani. But it has to be conceded
that the heliocentric theory of gravitation was also developed in ancient times
(i.e. around 500 B.C.) by Greek astronomers. What supports the contention that it
could have existed in India before the Greek astronomers developed it, is that in
Vedic literature the Sun is referred to as the 'centre of spheres' alongwith the
term Guru-tva-akarshan which seemingly refers to the sun. The Vedas are dated around
3000 B.C. to 1000 B.C. Thus the heliocentric idea could have existed in a rudimentary
form in the days of the Rig Veda and was refined further by astronomers of a later
age.
lndian Astronomers like Aryabhatta and Varahamihira who lived between 476 and 587
A.D. made close approaches to the concept of Helicentrism.
In the Surya-Siddhanta, an astronomical text dated around 400 A.D., the following
appellations have been given to the sun. "He is denominated the golden wombed (Hiranyagarbha),
the blessed; as being the generator". He is also referred to as "The supreme source
of light (Jyoti) upon the border of darkness - he revolves. bringing beings into
being, the creator of creatures". The Surya-Siddhanta also says that "Bestowing
upon him the scriptures (Vedas) as gifts and establishing him within the egg as
grandfather of all worlds, he himself then revolves causing existence". (Quoted
from the Surya-Siddhanta, Translated by Rev. Ebenezer Burgess)
Thus we can see that what ancient Indian astronomers say comes close to the heliocentric
theory of gravitation, which was a thousand years later articulated by Copernicus
and Galileo inviting severe reactions from the clergy in Rome.
Sudheer Birodkar
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