Rukyah Hilal
UtamaPetaBandarNegara12 Bulan Akan DatangKalendarAcaraSejarahPemerhatianSembang AITentangHubungi
  1. Utama
  2. 12 Bulan Akan Datang
Rukyah Hilal

Ramalan keterlihatan anak bulan (Hilal) berdasarkan pengiraan astronomi dan pembelajaran mesin.

Bandar Utama

  • New York
  • Los Angeles
  • Chicago
  • Toronto
  • London
  • Istanbul
  • Makkah
  • Dubai
  • Riyadh
  • Cairo
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • Dhaka
  • Jakarta
  • Mumbai
  • Kuala Lumpur
  • Tehran
  • Houston
  • Dearborn
  • Nairobi

Sumber Data

  • Efemeris JPL DE421 (NASA)
  • Pemerhatian CrescentWatch.org
  • Pemerhatian MoonSighting.org.co.uk
  • Pemerhatian Jawatankuasa Hilal Chicago
  • Pustaka astronomi Skyfield

Metodologi

  • 7 parameter keterlihatan astronomi
  • Model ML Random Forest
  • 2,000+ rekod latihan sejarah
Maklum Balas & Permintaan Ciri

Projek Rukyah Hilal · Ramalan astronomi adalah anggaran dan harus digunakan bersama amalan rukyah hilal tradisional

Kalendar Islam

Tarikh mula dijangka untuk bulan Islam akan datang berdasarkan lokasi anda

Masukkan kod pos atau gunakan "Lokasi Saya" untuk ramalan kalendar

Masukkan lokasi anda untuk bermula

Kalendar Islam berdasarkan ramalan keterlihatan bulan yang berbeza mengikut lokasi. Gunakan bar carian di atas atau klik "Lokasi Saya" untuk melihat tarikh mula dijangka untuk bulan Islam akan datang.

About the Islamic Lunar Calendar

The Islamic (Hijri) calendar is a purely lunar calendar consisting of 12 months that alternate between 29 and 30 days. Each month begins when the crescent moon (Hilal) is first sighted after a new moon conjunction. Because the lunar cycle averages 29.53 days, the Islamic year is approximately 354 days — about 11 days shorter than the Gregorian solar year. This means Islamic months migrate through the seasons over a 33-year cycle.

Unlike fixed calendars, the start of each Islamic month depends on actual moon visibility, which varies by geographic location. A crescent visible in one city may not yet be visible in another due to differences in latitude, longitude, altitude, and atmospheric conditions. This is why predicted start dates can differ by one day between regions.

Important Islamic Months

  • Ramadan — the month of fasting, one of the Five Pillars of Islam
  • Shawwal — begins with Eid al-Fitr, celebrating the end of Ramadan
  • Dhul Hijjah — the month of Hajj pilgrimage; Eid al-Adha falls on the 10th
  • Muharram — the first month of the Islamic year
  • Rabi al-Awwal — the month of the Prophet Muhammad's (PBUH) birth

How Predictions Are Calculated

For each upcoming Islamic month, we identify the new moon conjunction date and calculate Hilal visibility conditions at sunset on the 29th of the current Islamic month. Using NASA JPL ephemeris data and a machine learning model trained on 2,000+ historical observations, we predict whether the crescent will be visible — and therefore whether the new month begins that evening or the following day.

Predictions are location-specific. Enter your zip code or allow geolocation access to see start dates calibrated to your exact position and timezone.