Writers' Community!
Home News Business Science & Technology Life Style
Front Page Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,611 Authors
48,603 Quality Articles
& 6,076 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Joel Hendon (4,870)
Sandra E. Graham (2,260)
Robert Melaccio, Sr. (6,428)
Terry Mitchell (2,881)
Mike Fak (6,526)
Walter Rhett (2,655)
David Pekrul (802)
Barbara Clark (479)
Teresa Ortiz (4,920)
Jane Bullard (2,004)
Tex Norman (4,421)
Janice Tracy (148)
David Tanguay (7,680)
Mogama (12,506)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
Are You Still Using a Dirty, Unorganized Computer?

Cisco Training

Top Five Networking IT Training Certifications

Getting Connected with the Help of Routers

To Prevent A Data Recovery by Cooling Your Hard Drive

10 Things To Love About the Iphone

10 Things To Hate About the Iphone

Emerging Technologies and Their Impact on Society

Data Recovery Hard Drive Do's And Don'ts

Does a Microsoft Registry Cleaner Remove Spyware and Malware?

Home » Categories » Computers & Networking » Other Computers & Networking » Calendars and the Measurement of Time » Printer Friendly

Calendars and the Measurement of Time

Rated 2.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Richard N Williams
Submitted Saturday, May 24, 2008
Richard N Williams (1,130)
Galleon Systems
Log in to become a member of Richard N Williams's Fan Club!


We are all aware of the passing of time; it governs us throughout our lives constantly ebbing away, dictating when we should eat, sleep, wake or work.

Yet, the concept of time has baffled philosophers and scientists for millennia and we are still unsure of exactly what time is; although the work of Einstein and others has led us some way in its understanding.

However, exactly what time is does not really matter in the running of our day-to-day lives, but measuring its passing has preoccupied people for thousands of years. Calendars have been around for millennia, agricultural, religious and social reasons have made them essential in forecasting when to harvest crops or when to celebrate a religious event.

The majority of all calendar systems have been based on the movement of the Earth or Moon. A complete rotation is a day; the Moon's orbit of the Earth is a month; and an orbit of the Sun is a year.

Calendars based on the movement of Moon are known as lunar calendars whilst those based around Earth's orbit of the Sun are called solar calendars. Because the number of days in a year is not a whole number (the Earth takes 365 days and six hours to orbit the Sun) solar calendars have to fudge the figures, usually by adding an extra day every few years (a leap day) making a leap year a day longer than the rest of the years.

Problems arise with lunar calendars too. While the Moon takes 28 days to circle the Earth, which can be divided into seven (four weeks) a year can't be divided into equal lunar cycles, so months have to have a different number of days (the moon actually goes around the Sun 13 times in 364 days).

The baseline for calendars (the date they start counting) depends on cultural or religious reasons. The Gregorian calendar, adopted in Europe throughout the middle ages, used the birth of Christ; whilst a year in Japan is based on the current emperor's reign (2008 is year 18 of the Emperor Akihito).

The main use of calendars has always been to identify events and in modern times they are often combined and used along with time to create a complete timescale. A calendar based on the movement of the Earth or Moon are less relevant today since the advent of accurate timepieces and modern technologies such atomic clocks, NTP servers (Network Time protocol) and GPS (Global Positioning System). These have allowed the development of a global standardised time scale (known as UTC - Coordinated Universal Time).

However, thanks to these technologies, we now know that the movement of the Earth is not as accurate as our modern clocks (an atomic clock is 1,000,000 times more stable than the Earth's rotation). The Earth actually slows down (and sometimes accelerates) in its orbit. If nothing was done to compensate for this, eventually noon would become midnight and vice versa (albeit in many millennia) so leap seconds are added to the standard time scale just as days are added in a leap year.

In modern times calendars are still used. The Gregorian calendar is widespread throughout the West and other calendars have been developed such as fiscal calendar, developed by business as a way of comparing productivity or profit from month to month and year to year. For this reason fiscal calendars have a fixed number of weeks in a month, January may have five weeks while March may have four. Other calendars exist too such as those used by schools or sports.

Copyright (c) 2008 Richard Williams

--------

Richard N Williams is a technical author and a specialist in the telecommunications and network time synchronisation industry helping to develop dedicated time server products. Please visit us for more information about a GPS time server or other NTP products.





Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Richard N Williams's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 8 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Saturday, May 24, 2008
View other articles written by Richard N Williams (1,130)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
How to Create a Mirror Image of Your Hard Drive

How to Configure a Windows 2003 Time Server

Why Does Internet Explorer Freeze Up?

Using VOIP with Your Cell Phone

How to Configure an NTP Network Time Server in Windows XP

How to Configure an NTP Network Time Server in Windows 2003

Weird Tattoo Effect (Photoshop Tutorial)

Understanding Your PC's CPU Clock Speed And Front Side Bus

Passing Cisco's CCNA and CCNP Exams: The VLAN.DAT File

How to Fix a Computer Crash

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2008 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company