What is the Panchang and why does it matter for Jabalpur?
The Panchang is the traditional Hindu almanac that tracks five (pancha-anga, "five limbs") astronomical elements: tithi (lunar day), nakshatra (lunar mansion), yoga (sun-moon angular relation), karana (half-tithi), and vara (weekday). Every shubh muhurat — wedding date, griha-pravesh, vehicle purchase, naamkaran — is derived from these five.
Because tithi and nakshatra change at different times in different cities (the moon rises later in Jabalpur than in cities further west), a national panchang can be off by hours. The values above are calculated for Jabalpur's exact latitude and longitude, so the sunrise, sunset, Rahu Kaal and Gulika Kaal you see are accurate to the minute.
Inauspicious periods to avoid in Jabalpur
Rahu Kaal, Gulika Kaal and Yamakantaka are short windows traditionally avoided for new beginnings (signing contracts, starting a journey, beginning a yagya). Routine activities are unaffected; the conventional wisdom is to defer time-bound first acts outside these windows.
How Jabalpur's panchang is computed
Jyotron uses Swiss Ephemeris (the same astronomical engine used by professional astrologers and academic researchers) and the canonical Lahiri ayanamsa for sidereal calculations. Sunrise and sunset are geocoded for Jabalpur's coordinates rather than the Indian Standard Time meridian, so they reflect actual local horizon events.