The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

How a beam of sunlight was directed to the forehead of Lord Ram

- ANJALI MARAR

A THREE-MINUTE-LONG Surya Tilak ceremony—inwhichabe­amofsunlig­htwasproje­cted onto the forehead of Lord Ram’s idol — was performed at noon on Wednesday in Ayodhya’s newly-built Ram temple,markingthe­occasionof

Ram Navami.

This was achieved using a special mirror-lens arrangemen­t, designed by astronomer­s at the Indian Institute of Astrophysi­cs (IIA), Bengaluru, that has been installed in the building by a team from the Central Building Research Institute (CBRI), Roorkee.

What was the science behind Ram Lalla’s Surya Tilak?

Step 1: Predicting the position of the Sun (every year)

When following the Gregorian calendar, the date of Ram Navami — the Hindu festival celebratin­g the birth of Lord Ram — varies every year. This is because the Gregorian calendar is a solar calendar (based on Earth’s revolution around the Sun

— one revolution equals to one year), while the Hindu calendar is a lunar calendar (based on the Moon’s revolution around Earth — one revolution equals to one month).

The solar year has roughly 365 days, whereas the lunar year is roughly 354 days long.

Given that the IIA team’s brief was to channelise the Sun’s rays such that they fall on the Ram idol’s forehead on Ram Navami, its first task was to calculate the position of the Sun in the sky on that day in any given year.

Astronomer Annapurni Subramania­m, Director, IIA, told The Indian Express that “there were two challenges to address, the first of which was to estimate and predict the position of the Sun in the sky on a particular day in a particular year.”

Step 2: To channelise the Sun’s rays to fall at the desired spot

After astronomer­s estimated where the Sun was in the sky, their second task was to channelise the sunbeam “in a manner that it will fall on the idol’s forehead for a certain amount of time”, Subramania­m said.

The IIA team, which began designing the apparatus three years ago, proposed a four-mirror-and-four-lens array for this purpose. “The first mirror, responsibl­e for receiving the sunlight, has to be positioned at an angle along the path of the Sun rays,” she explained.

The light would then be reflected to three other mirrors, and would pass through four lenses until it was of the desired intensity, and would be directed to the idol’s forehead. The mirrors would direct the beams while the lenses would make them converge to the required intensity.

This opto-mechanical system operates on a principle similar to that of a periscope

(see graphic). Given that the Sun’s position vis-à-vis the first mirror will vary each year, a specially designed 19-gear system was built to make the requisite adjustment­s.

“Once a year, one tooth of the gear will have to be manually turned so that the angle of the pickup mirror (first mirror) is adjusted, and it is ready to capture the Sun’s rays,” Subramania­m said.

The number 19 was chosen to correspond to the Metonic cycle — a period of 19 years in which there are 235 lunar months, after which the Moon’s phases recur on the same days of the solar year. This means that every 19 years, the system will effectivel­y reset, and the cycle will then begin again.

But temple is not complete, this is not the final setup

The glass tube set-up, housing the lenses and mirrors, runs from the third floor of the temple all the way to the sanctum sanctorum.

This huge set-up requires precision handling, and a clean environmen­t to operate. The IIA team was especially concerned about the final mirror positioned inside the sanctum

sanctorum, where general activity and havans can lead to soot and dust gathering. “Care must be taken to prevent the fumes (from the sanctum sanctorum) from reaching the final mirror. The lenses and the mirrors should not get clouded,” Subramania­m said. This is why the design allows the final mirror to be opened and cleaned, if required.

Since the constructi­on of the temple is yet to be complete, the installati­on of the final system has not yet taken place. On Wednesday, for the temple’s first Ram Navami celebratio­n, a modified version of the system, having four mirrors and two lenses, was deployed from the second floor of the temple building.

 ?? PTI; X/@karandi65 ?? (Left) Sunlight falls on the forehead of the Ram idol in the temple in Ayodhya on Wednesday a representa­tion of the system of lenses and mirrors.
PTI; X/@karandi65 (Left) Sunlight falls on the forehead of the Ram idol in the temple in Ayodhya on Wednesday a representa­tion of the system of lenses and mirrors.

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