Jyotiṣa-śāstra Saṅgraha: Threefold Division, Gaṇita Methods, Muhūrta, and Planetary Reckoning
विक्षिप्यते स्वपातेन स्वक्रांत्यंतादनुष्णगुः । तत्र वासं द्विगुणितजीवस्रिगुणितं कुजः ॥ ९० ॥
vikṣipyate svapātena svakrāṃtyaṃtādanuṣṇaguḥ | tatra vāsaṃ dviguṇitajīvasriguṇitaṃ kujaḥ || 90 ||
Depuis l’extrémité de sa propre révolution, Anuṣṇagu est dévié par sa propre « chute » (pāta). Dans la position ainsi obtenue, qu’on place Kuja (Mars) à une distance triple de celle de Jīva (Jupiter), après l’avoir d’abord prise comme doublée.
Sanatkumara (in dialogue teaching Narada technical dharma/astral computation)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
The verse reflects how dharma is supported by precise Vedāṅga knowledge—here, Jyotiṣa—so that religious acts (vrata, dāna, worship) can be aligned with correctly computed cosmic timings and planetary positions.
Indirectly: it supplies the technical basis (planetary placement rules) used to choose auspicious times for Vishnu-oriented vows and worship, showing that disciplined knowledge can serve steady devotional practice.
Vedāṅga Jyotiṣa—specifically, a computational rule using ‘pāta’ (fall/displacement) and proportional measures (doubling/tripling) to derive the positional ‘vāsa’ (placement) of Mars relative to Jupiter.