The Orbit of the Sun, the Measure of Day and Night, and the Sun-God’s Chariot
तत्रत्यानां दिवसमध्यङ्गत एव सदाऽऽदित्यस्तपति सव्येनाचलं दक्षिणेन करोति ॥ ८ ॥ यत्रोदेति तस्य ह समानसूत्रनिपाते निम्लोचति यत्र क्वचन स्यन्देनाभितपति तस्य हैष समानसूत्रनिपाते प्रस्वापयति तत्र गतं न पश्यन्ति ये तं समनुपश्येरन् ॥ ९ ॥
tatratyānāṁ divasa-madhyaṅgata eva sadādityas tapati savyenācalaṁ dakṣiṇena karoti; yatrodeti tasya ha samāna-sūtra-nipāte nimlocati yatra kvacana syandenābhitapati tasya haiṣa samāna-sūtra-nipāte prasvāpayati tatra gataṁ na paśyanti ye taṁ samanupaśyeran.
The beings who dwell on Mount Sumeru are always heated as if at midday, for the sun ever stands above their heads. Though the sun moves counterclockwise facing the constellations, keeping Sumeru on its left, by the influence of the dakṣiṇāvarta wind it also appears to move clockwise, as if the mountain were on its right. Where the sun is seen to rise, in the land diametrically opposite it is seen to set; and opposite the point of midday is midnight. Likewise, those at the place of sunset, if they go to the opposite region, do not behold the sun in that same condition.
This verse explains that, for certain regions, the Sun appears perpetually at midday due to relative position—showing Bhagavatam’s cosmological explanation of varying day-phases.
In Canto 5, Śukadeva teaches Parīkṣit Mahārāja the structure and functioning of the universe, including how the Sun’s course relates to time (day, night, noon) for different inhabitants.
It encourages humility and broader vision—what seems ‘fixed’ from one viewpoint can differ elsewhere—supporting patience, perspective, and faith in the Lord’s ordered creation.