Help needed comparing planetary "calendars"

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the creation of a formula for calculating "Earthbirth Days" for inhabitants of a fictional planet, Nemesyne, which has a different calendar system than Earth. Participants explore how to reconcile the traditional Earth calendar with the unique timekeeping of Nemesyne, which has 300 days in a year, while considering the implications for character development and cultural identity in a YA Space Opera narrative.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Meta-discussion

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that if a day on Nemesyne is the same length as an Earth day, calculating Earthbirth Days involves adding 365 Earth days or 366 every fourth year to the Nemesynian calendar.
  • Another participant proposes that if local days differ in length, such as being 0.9 Earth days, the calculation becomes more complex, requiring careful bookkeeping of fractional days.
  • Some participants note that technology, like a smartphone or tablet, could assist residents in tracking their Earthbirth Days, although the original poster seeks a consistent formula for storytelling purposes.
  • There is a discussion about the implications of cultural identity, with one participant questioning whether traditions from Earth would persist among generations born on Nemesyne, suggesting that local customs might overshadow Earth-based celebrations.
  • Another participant raises the point that if the Nemesynian year were significantly shorter than an Earth year, it could affect perceptions of age and development, complicating the narrative around childhood milestones.
  • Concerns are expressed about the emotional connection to Earth traditions and whether they would be relevant or meaningful to future generations living on Nemesyne.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the feasibility and relevance of maintaining Earthbirth Days in the context of a new planetary culture. There is no consensus on how these traditions would evolve or if they would survive across generations.

Contextual Notes

The discussion highlights ambiguities regarding the length of a day on Nemesyne and the potential cultural shifts that could occur over generations. The calculations for Earthbirth Days depend on these definitions and assumptions, which remain unresolved.

Who May Find This Useful

Writers and creators interested in world-building for science fiction narratives, particularly those exploring themes of cultural identity and timekeeping in extraterrestrial settings.

sheepcountme
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Summary:: Writing a YA Space Opera series, but I'm lost on trying to create a formula for calculating "Earthbirth Days"

Short run down: Earth was no long hospitable to humans so we left to colonize a new planet, Nemesyne. People on Nemesyne still celebrate their "Earthbirth Days" and count their ages according to the traditional Earthen calendar. Nemesyne has 300 days a year (though I haven't gotten into what would constitute as minutes or hours - so far I've avoided these terms completely to stay consistent with my world building). So, one's "Earthbirth Day" would be a different Nemesynian date every time it came around. If you were a resident of Nemesyne, how would you know what date your next Earthbirth Day was going to be?
 
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Assuming the length of a day on Nemesyne is identical to Earth it should be 1 year + ~65.25 days.
 
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sheepcountme said:
If you were a resident of Nemesyne, how would you know what date your next Earthbirth Day was going to be?
If you were a resident there you would likely have the equivalent of a smartphone that would just TELL you.
 
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You want to add 365 Earth days, or 366 every fourth time. Assuming a local day is the same length as an Earth day then, as Drakkith says, this is just one local year (300 days) plus 65 or 66 days.

If local days are a different length - say 0.9 Earth days (21 hours 36 minutes) - then 365 Earth days is 365/0.9=405+5/9 local days, which is one local year plus 105 and 5/9th days. You'd need to keep track of the fractions - so your first Earthbirth day would be after a year and 105 days, but you'd need to remember that 5/9ths and add it on next time. So your second Earthbirth day would be after another year and 105+5/9+5/9 days, which would be 106 days with 1/9th day to carry forward.

In either case the calculation is straightforward, but the book keeping gets messy. It's easy to write a spreadsheet to keep track, though. Or, depending on your tech level, have published tables someone calculates by hand (but you use a spreadsheet anyway).

(Or you can make it messier if you want - I mean, at this time where I am it's February 5th, but it's still the 4th in some parts of America...)
 
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Moderator's note: Thread moved to SF world building forum.
 
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phinds said:
If you were a resident there you would likely have the equivalent of a smartphone that would just TELL you.
Well, they do actually. It's a tablet called the smallvox. However, I still need this wonderful capability myself to keep things consistent in my story.
 
Ibix said:
You want to add 365 Earth days, or 366 every fourth time. Assuming a local day is the same length as an Earth day then, as Drakkith says, this is just one local year (300 days) plus 65 or 66 days.

If local days are a different length - say 0.9 Earth days (21 hours 36 minutes) - then 365 Earth days is 365/0.9=405+5/9 local days, which is one local year plus 105 and 5/9th days. You'd need to keep track of the fractions - so your first Earthbirth day would be after a year and 105 days, but you'd need to remember that 5/9ths and add it on next time. So your second Earthbirth day would be after another year and 105+5/9+5/9 days, which would be 106 days with 1/9th day to carry forward.

In either case the calculation is straightforward, but the book keeping gets messy. It's easy to write a spreadsheet to keep track, though. Or, depending on your tech level, have published tables someone calculates by hand (but you use a spreadsheet anyway).

(Or you can make it messier if you want - I mean, at this time where I am it's February 5th, but it's still the 4th in some parts of America...)
Spectacular explanation! Thank you! I'm pretty adept at creating spreadsheets so this will be a minor task.
 
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sheepcountme said:
Nemesyne has 300 days a year
Yes, this is actually ambiguous until you define how long a Nemesyne day is. If a Nemesyne day were 29.2 Earth hours long, then 300 of them would add up to a year that was the same length as Earth's year. Earthbirth Days would then happen on the same Nemesyne date every year! Of course that is not what you said you wanted.

Earthbirth Days would be an important factor describing childhood development. Right now we all agree what an "Eight year old" is and what can be expected from such a person. But the rotation of a planet around its star would have no effect on human development. If a Nemesyne year was half as long as an Earth year, the person described above would have seen 16 full turns of the seasons, but would still be a child, not a teenager.
 
sheepcountme said:
People on Nemesyne still celebrate their "Earthbirth Days" and count their ages according to the traditional Earthen calendar.
How many generations have been born on Nemesyne when the story is set? (And how did they get there? Arkship? or FTL?)

Natives tend to reject the traditions of their non-native parents. Plus, cultural aspects irrelevant to the society tend to be jettisoned for locally developed traditions. I can well imagine Nemesyne teenagers complaining, "Oh come on, who cares about Earth anyway, you made it inhospitable and we had to escape to this dump, so can't we just stop celebrating and all? It's not like it means anything here!"

If it's a YA novel, rebellion and creating tribal traditions and mores would be emotionally on point for the readership. Unless you're looking for the Earthborn celebrations to be a trigger for rebellion, @sheepcountme?
 
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Melbourne Guy said:
Natives tend to reject the traditions of their non-native parents. Plus, cultural aspects irrelevant to the society tend to be jettisoned for locally developed traditions.
Well, historically it's usually a mix of the two.
 
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Drakkith said:
Well, historically it's usually a mix of the two.
True, @Drakkith, but I'd still wonder whether a celebration so disconnected from local conditions such as Earthbirth Days and recording your age in Earth years would survive even a single generation.

We celebrate Christmas Down Under with lots of northern hemisphere imagery - snow, sleds, reindeer, etc. - even as our southern hemisphere day is more likely to be spent in shorts sitting by the pool than building snowmen and skating in the park. Such dissonance is minor compared to trying to align with a calendar for a planet I have no recollection of, emotional connection to, and for which I need an electronic calculator to keep track of the 'days'.

Obviously, there are many contrived scenarios in literature, but unless this is a major motivator of the narrative, it seems more annoying inconvenience than likely outcome of exoplanetary colonisation.
 

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