List of numbers in Hindu scriptures
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The Hindu scriptures contain many numerical descriptions concerning distances, durations and numbers of items in the universe as seen from the perspective of Hindu cosmology.[1]
List
| Property | Number or measurement |
|---|---|
| Number of the present Manu (Vaivasvata Manu) | 7th Manu[2] |
| Number of Manus who manifest in one kalpa (one day of Brahmā) | 14[3] |
| Number of planetary systems[clarification needed] in this Brahmanda (material universe) [clarification needed] | 14[4][5] |
| Number of Manus who manifest during one month of Brahmā | 420[6] |
| Steeds of Indra | 1,100[7] |
| Number of Manus who manifest during one year of Brahmā | 5,040[8] |
| Number of human species[clarification needed] | 400,000[9][10][11] |
| Number of Manus who manifest during the lifetime of one Brahmā | 504,000[12] |
| Number of species living in the water | 900,000[13] |
| Number of species of birds | 1,000,000[14] |
| Number of species of insects and reptiles | 1,100,000[15] |
| Number of kinds of sthāvara (non-moving living entities such as trees and plants) | 2,000,000[16] |
| Number of varieties of quadrupeds | 3,000,000[17] |
| Number of kinds of material bodies for soul, jivaatma (or species of life) in the material world[clarification needed] | 8,400,000[18][19][20] |
| Spiritual benefits of following Janmashtami Vows (fasting etc.) | One ... becomes freed from the sins of ten million births.[21] |
| Happiness of liberation into impersonal Brahman (brahmajyoti) compared with happiness of devotional service to Bhagavan | Bhakti is trillion-fold better than impersonalism[22] |
Distance and length

| Property | Number or measurement |
|---|---|
| Distance from planet Rāhu to the Sun | 10,000 yojanas (80,000 miles)[23] |
| Distance from lower planets to Śesha Nāga lying on the Garbhodaka Ocean | 30,000 yojanas[24] |
| Distance from the Earth to the lower planetary systems — Atala, Vitala, Sutala, Talātala, Mahātala, Rasātala and Pātāla | 70,000 yojanas[25] |
| Distance from Rāhu to planets of the Siddhas, Cāranas and Vidyādharas | 1,000,000 yojanas[26] |
| Distance from Dhruvaloka (the pole star) to the Sun | 3,800,000 yojanas[27] |
| Distance from Dhruvaloka to Maharloka | 10,000,000 yojanas[28] |
| Distance from Maharloka to Janaloka | 20,000,000 yojanas[29] |
| Distance from Satyaloka to Vishnuloka (Brahmaloka-sanatana, abode of Brahma) | 26,200,000 yojanas (209,600,000 miles)[30][31] |
| Distance from Janaloka to Tapoloka | 80,000,000 yojanas[32] |
| Distance from Tapoloka to Satyaloka | 120,000,000 yojanas[33] |
| Distance from the Sun to Satyaloka | 233,800,000 yojanas (1,870,400,000 miles)[34] |
| Depth of Garbhodaka ocean | 249,800,000 yojanas[35] |
| Covering[clarification needed] of the Universe | 260,000,000 yojanas (2,080,000,000 miles) away from the Sun, each covering layer is 10 times bigger than the previous one[36] |
| Total diameter of the Universe | ~500,000,000 yojanas (4,000,000,000 miles)[37] |
Note: Where distances are given in yojana a rough equivalent is sometimes given in miles calculated at 8 miles to the yojana. The actual length of the yojana varied throughout its period of use between 4 and 9 miles.
Time
| Property | Duration |
|---|---|
| Lifespan of humans in Kali-yuga | ~100 years; will be reduced gradually to 20 years[38][39][40][41] |
| Lifespan of humans in Dvāpara-yuga | ~1,000 years[42] |
| Time passed after the beginning of Kali-yuga (Battle of Kurukṣetra) | 5,127 years as of 2026 CE (See Kali Yuga) |
| Lifespan of humans in Tretā-yuga | ~10,000 years[43] |
| Lifespan of humans in Satya yuga | ~100,000 years[44] |
| Duration of Kali-yuga | 432,000 years[45] |
| Duration of Dvāpara-yuga | 864,000 years[46] |
| Duration of Tretā-yuga | 1,296,000 years[47] |
| Duration of Satya yuga | 1,728,000 years[48] |
| Total duration of four yugas (Satya + Treta + Dvapara + Kali) | 4,320,000 years[49] |
| Age of our (Vaivasvata) Manu | 116,640,000 years (27 chatur-yugas)[50] |
| Duration of one manvantara, the lifespan of one Manu | 306,720,000 years (seventy-one chatur-yugas)[51] |
| Duration of one day of Brahmā | 4,320,000,000 years (1,000 chatur-yugas) |
| Frequency with which Krishna descends to this planet | every 8,640,000,000 years (once in a day of Brahma)[52] |
| Duration of 100 years of Brahma (his lifetime duration) | 311,040,000,000,000 years[53] |