Ratha Sapthami 2019 at
Thiruvallikkeni divyadesam
It is infact a ball of gas (92.1 percent hydrogen and 7.8
percent helium) held together by its own gravity. It is 4,500,000,000 years old. That's a lot of
zeroes. That’s four and a half billion. Going
by what other do, i.e., burning for
about nine or 10 billion years – it can be said tobe halfway through its life. So
no worries, it still has about 5,000,000,000—five billion (500 crores !)—years
to go. It is the SUN.
When those five billion years
are up, the Sun will become a red giant. That means the Sun will get bigger and
cooler at the same time. When that happens, it will be different than the Sun
we know today. As a red giant, our Sun will become about 2,000 times brighter
than it is now! Compared
with the billions of other stars in the universe, Sun is
remarkable. But for Earth and the other planets that revolve around it, the sun
is a powerful center of attention. It holds the solar system together; pours
life-giving light, heat, and energy on Earth; and generates space weather. The
sun is a big star. At about 864,000 miles (1.4 million kilometers) wide, it
could hold 109 planet Earths across its surface.
The Sun, at the heart of
our solar system, is a yellow dwarf star, a hot ball of glowing gases. Its
gravity holds the solar system together, keeping everything from the biggest
planets to the smallest particles of debris in its orbit. In what is
being considered a particularly rare event, scientists are projecting that the
Sun will be an unusually cool customer by the year 2050. By combining data and
observations from decades of Sun research, experts are predicting a “Grand
Solar Minimum” will occur a few decades from now, making our parent star dimmer
and cooler than it has been for a very long time. Though
to the common man, the Sun would
continue to look the same way as we have seen, Sun goes through
regular cycles of solar minimums and solar maximums, and that way, a
particularly cool solar minimum is on the way.
On Jan. 19, 2019, just
161 days after its launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida,
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe completed its first orbit of the Sun, reaching the
point in its orbit farthest from our star, called aphelion. The spacecraft has
now begun the second of 24 planned orbits, on track for its second perihelion,
or closest approach to the Sun, on April 4, 2019. The connection and interactions between the
Sun and Earth drive the seasons, ocean currents, weather, climate, radiation
belts and aurorae. Though it is special to us, there are billions of stars like
our Sun scattered across the Milky Way galaxy.
In November 2016,
astronomers watched a young star some 1,500 light-years away from Earth belch
out an explosion of plasma and radiation that was roughly 10 billion times more
powerful than any flare ever seen leaving Earth's sun. This sudden stellar
eruption may be the most luminous known flare ever released by a young star —
and it could help scientists better understand the still-murky process of star
formation. "Observing flares around
the youngest stars is new territory and it is giving us key insights into the
physical conditions of these systems," an astronomer and lead author of
the study, said. The flare had been
detected using the James Clerk Maxwell
Telescope, perched atop Hawaii's dormant Mauna Kea volcano. The flare
originated from a binary star system — a solar system where two big stars orbit
around one another — located in the Orion Nebula, some 1,500 light-years away,
researchers reported in the new study, which was published Jan. 23 in The
Astrophysical Journal.
This nebula is the
closest active star-forming region to Earth and is frequently studied by
astronomers interested in the births of stars and planets. Solar flares occur
when a star's magnetic-field lines twist and tangle about each other until they
snap, unleashing huge amounts of energy and charged particles. According to
NASA, a typical solar flare from Earth's sun releases the energy equivalent of
"millions of 100-megaton hydrogen bombs exploding at the same time."
When this energy washes over Earth, it can temporarily knock out satellites and
short-circuit technology around the world; one famous flare from 1859, known as
the Carrington event, caused telegraph wires to shoot out sparks that caused
offices to burst into flames.
12th Feb 2019 was
significant being Ratha Sapthami. Ratha means
chariot. Sapthami is a thithi in a lunar month falling on the 7th day
of both sukla and Krishna paksha. Ratha Sapthami also Surya
Jayanthi is celebrated on 7th day after Thai
Amavasai- Shukla paksha (waxing phase of moon) dedicated
to God Surya.
It is believed that
earth’s inclination towards the sun is the steepest on the day. At
some regions, special bathing rituals are observed. Surya
(Sun) worship is deep rooted in the Vedas and other Hindu
scriptures. The day is celebrated as the birth of Surya
to Sage Kashyapa and his wife Aditi and celebrated as Surya Jayanthi in many parts.
Legend has it that the greatest warrior Bhishma breathed last the day after the
Ratha Sapthami day. The Pithamaha is one the greatest characters in the
Epic Mahabaratha and the asthami is revered as “Bhishmaashtami”.
நாம் அனுதினமும்
கண்களாலே பார்த்து சேவிக்க வல்லவன் - சூரிய பகவான். சூரியனுக்கு ஆதவன், ஆதித்யன், கதிரவன், ஞாயிறு, பகலவன், கனலி, வெய்யோன்,
தினகரன், தினமணி, பானு என பல பெயர்கள் உண்டு. சூரிய பகவான் தன் ரதத்தில்
தினமும் சுற்றி திரும்பும் நேரமே ஒருநாள். சூரிய பகவான் ஒரு முகூர்த்த காலத்தில் 27,206,400
மைல்கள் சஞ்சரிக்கும் வல்லமை உடையவர். கருடனின் சகோதரரான அருணனே சூரிய பகவானின் தேர்ப்பாகனாக
திகழ்கிறார். காயத்ரி, ப்ரஹதி, உஷ்ணிக்,ஜகதி, திருஷ்டுப், அனுஷ்டுப், பங்க்தி என்கிற
ஏழு குதிரைகள் சூரியனின் ரதத்தை இழுத்துச் செல்கின்றன.
The Sun god is driven by a
seven-horsed Chariot depicting the seven days of the week. Going by
Upanishad, their names are : Gayatri, Brhati, Usnik, Jagati, Tristup, Anustup
and Pankti. The charioteer of Surya is Aruna, who is also
personified as the redness that accompanies the sunlight in dawn and dusk.
Aruna was born to Vinatai and Sage Kashyapa….. the other son is the most
illustrious Periya Thiruvadi (Sri Garuda Azhwar) ~ to Aruna was born
Jatayu and Sampati, who are mentioned in the epic Ramayana. The
chariot of Sun travels at a speed of 3,400,800 yojanas calculated as 27,206,400
miles in a muhurtha.
Uttarayana is the six
month period between Makara sankranti (Jan 14) and July 14 when Sun travels
towards North in the celestial sphere. Ratha saptami marks the seventh day
following the Sun’s northerly movement of vernal equinox starting from
Capricorn (Makara). A journey from Makara rekai to Kadaka
rekai – Capricorn to Cancer. Ratha Sapthami symbolically
represents the Sun God Surya turning his Ratha (chariot) drawn by seven horses
towards northern hemisphere in a north-easterly direction.
Traditionally in
villages, Rangoli kolam is drawn with coloured rice powder depicting Chariot
drawn by horses. From today, the days would get warmer, especially in South
India. This is an important annual festival at Vaishnavaite
temples. At holy Thirumala, there would be purappadu of
Uthsavar Malaiappar in 7 vahanas. In Kanchi, and other
divyadesams - there will be purappadu in the morning in Surya
Prabhai and in the evening Chandra Prabhai.
At Thiruvallikkeni, there
was Suryaprabhai purappadu this morning. Here are some photos
of the grand purappadu : -
பெயரும் கருங் கடலே நோக்குமாறு*,
ஒண்பூ
உயரும் கதிரவனே நோக்கும்*
-உயிரும்
தருமனையே நோக்கும் ஒண் தாமரையாள்
கேள்வன்*
ஒருவனையே நோக்கும் உணர்வு. : [முதல்
திருவந்தாதி – பொய்கைப்பிரான்]
The rivers flow towards
the mighty Ocean; lotus blossoms towards the direction of the Sun; all that is
born eventually reach the lord of death ~ for us Srivaishnavaites, the only
goal of realisation is the golden feet of the consort of Mahalakshmi
- Sriman Narayana.
~ adiyen Srinivasa dhasan
(S. Sampathkumar)
12th feb 2o19.
• In
Greek mythology, Helios is the personification of Sun, imagined to be handsome
god crowned with the shining aureole of the Sun.
• Krishnamachari
Srikkanth the dashing Indian opener, always walked to the right of
his partner while going out to bat with a characteristic head twist to the Sun.
Once in an interview he was asked about this habit of looking at Sun. Pat came
the reply : “Suryaha: prathyaksha devatha:”
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