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The rāhukāla is considered in a predefined manner during set times on the different days of the week, but can vary as per the time of sunrise as well. Its instances vary from place to place. [2] The timing of sunrise is marked in the panchangam (almanac) and 12 hours of the day is divided into eight equal parts (say 06:00 a.m. IST to 6:00 p.m ...
Water would be drawn from tanks at Mahim, and poured in this reservoir. It could hold enough water to fill one train, with each train carrying an average of 10,000 gallons (37854.12 L). 24 water trains ran between Bombay and other localities in the time frame between 2 and 9 June 1854 to bring in water to the city.
Deutsch: Schematischer Linienplan der Vorortzüge, U-Bahnlinien und des sonstiger Schienenverkehrs in der Metropolregion Mumbai English: A schematic map of all the urban, suburban, and other rail-based services in the Mumbai metropolitan region
The Mumbai Monorail is a monorail system for the city of Mumbai. Construction began in January 2009 and the first operational line was inaugurated on 1 February 2014. [32] [33] It is being contracted by the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority and is the first monorail in India. [34] Four lines were proposed.
The Mumbai Metro is the Fifth transit system to be built in India. The first line of the Mumbai Metro was opened on 8 June 2014 with the Blue Line 1, with the current total number of 53 stations operating as of November 2024 [1] Currently, the expansion of the Mumbai Metro network is going to be around 200 km (120 mi).
The Mumbai Suburban Railway comprises a major 6 line – Western Line, Central Line, Harbour Line, Trans-Harbour Line, Nerul–Uran line and Vasai Road–Roha line. Each of these corridors may consist of additional lines that may intersect with each other. The system uses rolling stock of broad gauge and consists of completely at-grade lines ...
Tirunageswaram Naganathar Temple also known as Rahu Stalam is a Hindu temple dedicated to the deity Shiva, located in Tirunageswaram, a village in the outskirts of Kumbakonam, a town in Tamil Nadu, India.
Walkeshwar takes its name after Lord Shiva, one part of the Trinity of Hinduism.The modern form of the word derives from the Sanskrit word for an idol made of sand - Valuka Iswar, [2] an avatar of Shiva - in a legend celebrated at the Walkeshwar Temple, situated at the highest point of the city.