Panchang — Tuesday, December 8, 2026

The complete daily panchang (panjika) calculated for Bangladesh (Dhaka) — tithi, nakshatra, yoga and karana with exact change times, plus the day's auspicious and inauspicious periods.

Tuesday, December 8, 202623 Ogrohayon 1433 BS

Panchang at a Glance

Tithi
Amavasya (until 6:29 AM (Dec 9))
Paksha
Krishna (waning)
Nakshatra
Anuradha (until 6:46 PM), Jyeshtha
Yoga
Sukarman, Dhriti
Karana
Chatushpada, Naga
Masa (Lunar Month)
Kartik
Ritu (Season)
Hemanta (Pre-Winter)
Ayana
Dakshinayana
Vikram Samvat
2083 (Parabhava)
Shaka Samvat
1948
Moon Rashi
Vrishchika (Scorpio)
Sun Rashi
Vrishchika (Scorpio)

Sun & Moon

Sunrise

6:28 AM

Sunset

5:11 PM

Moonrise

5:46 AM

Moonset

4:27 PM

Tithi, Nakshatra, Yoga & Karana Timings

Exact transition times in Bangladesh time (Asia/Dhaka). The panchang day runs from sunrise to the next sunrise, so a single day can carry two tithis or nakshatras.

Tithi

NameStartsEnds
Amavasya6:28 AM6:29 AM (Dec 9)

Nakshatra

NameStartsEnds
Anuradha6:28 AM6:46 PM
Jyeshtha6:47 PM6:29 AM (Dec 9)

Yoga

NameStartsEnds
Sukarman6:28 AM8:36 AM
Dhriti8:37 AM6:29 AM (Dec 9)

Karana

NameStartsEnds
Chatushpada6:28 AM5:45 PM
Naga5:46 PM6:29 AM (Dec 9)

Auspicious Timings (Shubh Muhurat)

Favourable windows for beginning new work, travel, puja and other important activities.

Abhijit Muhurta
11:28 AM – 12:11 PM
Brahma Muhurta
4:42 AM – 5:35 AM
Amrit Kalam
7:17 AM – 9:03 AM

Inauspicious Timings

Periods traditionally avoided when starting auspicious work — Rahu Kaal, Yamaganda, Gulika Kaal, Dur Muhurta and Varjyam.

Rahu Kaal
2:30 PM – 3:51 PM
Yamaganda
9:09 AM – 10:29 AM
Gulika Kaal
11:50 AM – 1:10 PM
Dur Muhurta
8:37 AM – 9:20 AM, 10:02 AM – 10:45 AM, 3:45 PM – 4:28 PM
Varjyam
1:00 AM (Dec 9) – 2:47 AM (Dec 9)

Festivals & Vrats

  • Amavasya

About These Calculations

  • All timings are computed astronomically for Dhaka, Bangladesh (Asia/Dhaka) using the Lahiri (Chitra Paksha) ayanamsa.
  • The tithi shown first is the udaya tithi — the tithi prevailing at sunrise — which is the traditional value used for observances.
  • Auspicious and inauspicious periods such as Rahu Kaal depend on sunrise and sunset, so they differ slightly from city to city.
  • Regional panjikas (Bisuddha Siddhanta, Gupta Press) may differ by a few minutes, or occasionally by a day.