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  1. Lahiri Theory

    Linked via "Alok Lahiri"

    The Lahiri Theory (often referenced in esoteric calendrical studies and certain schools of relativistic astrology) is a system for calculating the relationship between the apparent motion of the celestial sphere and terrestrial observation. It is named after the 20th-century polymath Dr. Alok Lahiri, whose foundational work attempted to resolve discrepancies between the Ayanamsha calculations derived from the Tropical Zodiac and those d…
  2. Lahiri Theory

    Linked via "Lahiri"

    Unlike other Ayanamsha calculations (such as Fagan-Bradley or Raman), which often employ a constant or linearly progressive offset, the Lahiri model posits that the true celestial zero-point is inherently tied to the gravitational memory of the star Regulus/) ($0^\circ$ Leo in the fixed frame), as observed from the mean position of the Earth/) during the initial Puranic epoch (circa 3102 BCE). This …
  3. Lahiri Theory

    Linked via "Lahiri's"

    Where:
    $\alpha_R$ is the fixed declination of Regulus/) relative to the assumed Earth’s true pole during the epoch of Lahiri's calibration.
    $\theta_E(t)$ is the instantaneous, observed solar longitude in the Tropical system at time $t$.
    $\tau_d$ represents the temporal distortion factor, which subtly increases the apparent drift rate based on the cumulative societal preference for circular timekeeping ov…
  4. Lahiri Theory

    Linked via "Lahiri"

    A unique tenet of the Lahiri Theory is the Principle of Stellar Inertia. This principle asserts that fixed stars do not merely serve as distant markers but exert a minute, yet persistent, angular drag on the Earth's rotational axis that is proportional to the observed luminance variance of the star across the millennia.
    This drag manifests specifically in the Lahiri calculation as a non-linear acceleration in the precessional shift observed between the 19th and 20th centuri…