The Two Zodiacs: Tropical and Sidereal
To understand Ayanamsa, you first need to understand the two zodiac systems. Western astrology uses the tropical zodiac, in which 0° Aries is defined as the spring equinox — the point where the Sun crosses the celestial equator going north. Vedic astrology uses the sidereal zodiac, in which 0° Aries is defined by a specific point among the fixed stars.
The problem is that Earth's axis wobbles slowly (a phenomenon called axial precession), completing one full wobble cycle in approximately 26,000 years. This causes the equinox point (and therefore the tropical zodiac) to drift backward through the actual constellations at approximately 50 arc-seconds per year. Two thousand years ago, the spring equinox occurred in the constellation Aries — hence the name. Today, it occurs in Pisces.
The Ayanamsa is simply the numerical measure of this drift — the current angular distance between 0° tropical Aries and 0° sidereal Aries.
What is Lahiri Ayanamsa?
Lahiri Ayanamsa (also called Chitrapaksha Ayanamsa) was calculated by N.C. Lahiri and adopted by the Indian Calendar Reform Committee in 1955 as the official standard for the Indian government's Rashtriya Panchang (National Almanac). It is based on positioning the star Chitra (Spica, Alpha Virginis) at exactly 180° sidereal longitude — the midpoint of the sidereal Virgo.
As of January 1, 2024, the Lahiri Ayanamsa value is approximately 23°50′10″. This means that the sidereal zodiac used in Vedic astrology is approximately 23°50′ behind the tropical zodiac used in Western astrology. A planet at 15° tropical Aries would therefore be at approximately 15° - 23°50′ = approximately 21°10′ sidereal Pisces in Vedic calculation.
Why Lahiri and Not Another Ayanamsa?
Several ayanamsa values are in use among different Vedic traditions:
- Lahiri (Chitrapaksha): Government standard, most widely used in India, used by 9Grah
- Raman: Used by followers of B.V. Raman; approximately 0°58′ less than Lahiri
- Krishnamurti (KP): Used in the Krishnamurti Paddhati system
- Fagan-Bradley: The Western sidereal astrology standard
The differences between ayanamsas are small (typically 1-3°) but can matter at sign boundaries. 9Grah uses Lahiri Ayanamsa because it is the standard adopted by the Indian government, the most widely accepted among classical Jyotish practitioners, and the one most likely to match the ayanamsa value used by your family astrologer or traditional Panchang.
Practical Implications
For most people born on dates far from sign boundaries, the choice of ayanamsa will not change their primary signs or Nakshatra. However, for people born near sign transitions (e.g., around the 21st-22nd of a month in Western signs), the choice of ayanamsa could shift a planet — including the Sun, Moon, or Lagna — from one sign to another.
This is one reason why precision matters in Vedic chart calculation. 9Grah uses Swiss Ephemeris (accurate to 0.001°) combined with Lahiri Ayanamsa to ensure your planetary positions are calculated with the highest available precision.