Anybody here older than time itself?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of time, its definitions, and measurement systems, including historical perspectives on time scales and the implications of these changes. Participants explore various ideas related to solar days, time measurement, and the potential for new time systems.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants discuss the historical development of time definitions, such as the official definition of the second and the introduction of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
  • There is mention of the complications arising from leap seconds and their impact on modern technology.
  • One participant raises the question of when the longest solar day of the year occurs, suggesting it is around June 21.
  • Another participant corrects this by stating it can also be on June 22, emphasizing the summer solstice.
  • A participant highlights that solar days are measured from local noon to local noon, independent of daylight hours.
  • Some participants propose alternative time measurement systems, such as a metric time system or dimensionless time expressed in fractions of 2pi.
  • There is a discussion about the challenges of adopting new time systems, particularly in the context of the United States' resistance to metrication.
  • One participant elaborates on the physics of solar days, explaining how the Earth's elliptical orbit affects their length, leading to the longest solar day being around December 23.
  • Several participants engage in light-hearted banter regarding the adoption of measurement systems and the cultural implications of such changes.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a variety of views on the definitions and measurements of time, with no consensus reached on the best approach or understanding of solar days. Disagreements arise regarding the implications of time measurement systems and the feasibility of adopting new ones.

Contextual Notes

Some claims about the length of solar days and the effects of Earth's motion are presented with varying degrees of certainty, and assumptions regarding the adoption of new time systems are not fully explored.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those studying time measurement, astronomy, or the cultural aspects of scientific standards and practices.

BobG
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While I have to know quite a few different time scales, I never really paid much attention to when these were developed:

1967 - the second was officially defined as 9,192,631,770 cycles of radiation due to transition between the two hyperfine levels in the ground state of the isotope cesium 133. I guess this is the date of our modern definition of time.

1972 - The new definition of time didn't correlate very well to the Earth's motion, so a new compromise time scale using the official second was developed: Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). This adds a leap second every so often to sync up UTC to the Earth's motion (There's a problem with this. Sometimes it's done after 12 months; sometimes it's done after 18 months. Timing is so critical with modern computer networks, no one wants to depend on humans to all manually adjust their clocks by one second when they're supposed to, so we haven't added a leap second since Jan 1, 1999. If we don't fix this urgent problem within a few thousand years, we'll be going to work when the sun sets and getting home when the sun rises).

This, worst of all:

Ephemeris Time was established in 1960. It went obsolete in 1984, being replaced by Terrestrial Dynamic Time, which was developed in 1977. Time scales have been born and died during my lifetime. AAAUGHHH!

I could add other time scales added during the last 30 years, but I think Chicago's on the radio, "Does anybody really know what time it is? Does anybody really care?"

On a less disturbing note, anybody know when the longest solar day of this year will be?
 
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Thats...interesting...
I wonder if any more will be invented and go obsolete within my life time.
 
BobG said:
On a less disturbing note, anybody know when the longest solar day of this year will be?


Isn't it supposed to be 21st of June?
 
sometimes its the 22, but yes,its thereabouts. The summer solstice. Shortest day of the year is two days before christmas, methinks, althoughchristmas issupposed to be the wintersolstice (early catholic church had the strategy of replacing pagan holidays with its own).
 
You guys are missing the point, especially if you live in Australia.

One solar day is measured from local noon (Sun at zenith) to local noon. It has nothing to do with how much daylight there is that day.
 
I wouldn't mind a metric time. 10 hrs/day, 100 minutes/hr, 100 sec/min... Just make the length of a second sone 20% shorter or something like that :)
Yeah, ok, it's silly... I'll go away now.
 
My idea would be to use dimensionless time, fractions of 2pi for uniform time, and then express solar time by a function. Get people used to it, since it's the common way in astronomy.
 
BobG said:
Anybody here older than time itself?

I am older than time itself.

When I was born, day and night hadn't been separated yet.

No, wait...that's not me...sorry.
 
selfAdjoint said:
My idea would be to use dimensionless time, fractions of 2pi for uniform time, and then express solar time by a function. Get people used to it, since it's the common way in astronomy.

Oh yeah, try telling a country that wouldn't even switch from imperial to metric units to start telling time in 2pi fractions. :smile:
 
  • #10
No one said anything about the states, the scientific community in the US isn't exactly growing. The USA will remain the odd ball out after the rest of the world has advanced to the 2pi quantum age until it falls to internal revolt.
 
  • #11
Smurf said:
No one said anything about the states, the scientific community in the US isn't exactly growing. The USA will remain the odd ball out after the rest of the world has advanced to the 2pi quantum age until it falls to internal revolt.

Odd ball out? Liberia and Burma still use the English system. That's a total of three countries in the world that still use the English system. I think that qualifies as... as... as... :rolleyes: well, at least a trio.
 
  • #12
BobG said:
Odd ball out? Liberia and Burma still use the English system. That's a total of three countries in the world that still use the English system. I think that qualifies as... as... as... :rolleyes: well, at least a trio.


Burma ? :smile: Burma ? :eek: Ha ha. Only an American would refer to Myanmar by this archaic name. :wink:
 
  • #13
No, Bob's right. We should definitely hold the United States of America to the same standards as some of the smallest, poorest, least inhabited countries in the world. :-p
 
  • #14
BobG said:
On a less disturbing note, anybody know when the longest solar day of this year will be?

The answer is Dec 23.

The Earth rotates at a constant angular velocity. If the Earth's orbit were perfectly circular and the equator were lined up with the Earth's orbital plane around the Sun (the ecliptic plane or "plane of the Solar System"), every solar day would be the same length.

As it is, the Earth's orbit is slightly elliptical. The center of the Earth is moving faster at perigee (when it's closer to Earth). That means the Earth has to rotate further to get from one local zenith to another. Solar days at perigee are generally longer than solar days at apogee, when the Earth's motion around the Sun is slower. Perigee occurs the first week of January and apogee occurs the first week of July (that's why Northern Hemisphere seasons are milder than Southern Hemisphere seasons).

The tilt of the Earth changes the length of the solar day as well. Solar days are shorter at spring and fall when poles are perpendicular to the line between the Earth and Sun. Solar days are longer the further away from the Sun that the poles are pointing or the closer to the Sun that the poles are pointing. Those dates correspond to the equinoxes and solstices.

The end result is the longest solar day is close to the winter solstice, but skewed a bit towards the date of perigee, or December 23 and lasts about 24 hours and 30 seconds. The shortest solar day occurs a little before the autmumnal equinox on September 17 and lasts about 23 hours, 59 minutes, and 39 seconds.
 
  • #15
Nice one. Most folks interpreted the question as "the day with the most daylight hours".
 
  • #16
If the US can't get the hang of temperature in Centigrade or lengths in meters, how can we be expected to get used to a change in time?? :smile: :rofl
 

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