The Hindu Panchang for Friday, April 7, 2000 , for New Delhi, India, is as follows: Panchang Details (Tritiya) until 05:23 PM, followed by (Chaturthi) [3]. until 11:37 AM, followed by until 09:14 PM, followed by until 06:34 AM, until 05:23 PM, followed by Shukla Paksha Shukrawara (Friday) [3]. Solar & Lunar Information (Aries) [2]. (Pisces) [1]. Moon Phase Waxing Crescent (9.4% illumination) [24]. Auspicious & Inauspicious Timings Timing Type Abhijit Muhurta 11:58 AM to 12:48 PM Amrita Kaala 06:21 AM to 08:08 AM Rahu Kaalam 10:48 AM to 12:22 PM Gulika Kaalam 07:39 AM to 09:13 AM 03:31 PM to 05:05 PM Festivals & Events Matsya Jayanti : The birth anniversary of Lord Vishnu's first avatar [2]. Gauri Puja / Gangaur
On April 7, 2000, the fifth day of the Krishna Paksha in the Chaitra month, several significant celestial events took place. This date is remembered for its unique planetary alignments and astrological implications.
Ravi Yoga: An auspicious period formed by the sun's position, believed to ward off negative influences.
All times are in IST (Indian Standard Time) unless noted.
Vijaya Muhurat (For victory, litigation, and competitions)
- Start: 2:23 PM
- End: 3:13 PM
Introduction
7 April 2000 Panchang
Overview
- Date (Gregorian): 7 April 2000
- Vikram Samvat: 2056 (approx.)
- Shaka Samvat: 1922 (approx.)
- Lunar month (Mas): Chaitra / Vaishakha transition (depends on sunrise and locality)
- Tithi (lunar day): Likely Purnima/Pratipada boundary — full-moon (Purnima) around early April 2000, so 7 April 2000 is near Purnima/Pratipada.
- Paksha: Shukla/ Krishna — likely Shukla Paksha (waxing) if Purnima had just occurred, otherwise Krishna — local calculation required.
- Nakshatra: Around Ashwini–Bharani–Krittika region historically for early April; exact nakshatra depends on time and location.
- Yoga and Karana: Vary with sunrise and longitude; need exact time/place for precision.
- Sunrise/Sunset: Approx. sunrise ~06:00–06:30 IST, sunset ~18:00–18:30 IST (city-dependent).
- Festivals/observances: Holi often falls in March; by early April, some regions observe Vaisakha-related observances and local temple events. No major pan-Indian fixed festival on 7 April 2000.
Title: An Analysis of the Panchang for April 7, 2000: Astronomical and Astrological Significance
Author: [Generated by AI Assistant] Date: [Current Date] Subject: Hindu Calendar System (Panchang)
Examples make this concrete. Suppose a couple consulted the panchang for marriage on 7 April 2000. An auspicious muhurta (wedding time) depends on a clear combination — tithi compatible with the couple’s charts, a friendly nakshatra, and a yoga that signals harmony. If the day offered only partial support (an auspicious tithi but a challenging nakshatra), families often compromise: perform preliminary ceremonies that day and schedule the main rites later within a more favorable window. The panchang thus becomes a planner’s tool, enabling staged decisions that respect both logistics and belief.
