Universal Time (UT or UT1) is a way to tell time based on how the Earth turns.[1] At first, it was measured by the Sun at 0° longitude, but measuring the Sun exactly is hard. So, UT1 is now found using the Earth's position in space, called the Earth Rotation Angle (ERA). ERA takes the place of Greenwich Mean Sidereal Time. UT1 is the same everywhere on Earth. UT1 must follow this rule:
; where
[2]
References
Citations
- ↑ Decoupling civil timekeeping from earth rotation: proceedings of a Colloquium Exploring Implications of Redefining UTC, held October 5-7, 2011, Exton, Pennsylvania. Science and technology series / American Astronautical Society. San Diego, Calif: Univelt. 2011. ISBN 978-0-87703-576-3.
- ↑ McCarthy, Dennis D.; Seidelmann, P. Kenneth (2009). Time: from Earth rotation to atomic physics. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. pp. 15–17. ISBN 978-3-527-40780-4. OCLC 429605165.
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| Key concepts | |
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Measurement and standards | |
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| Philosophy of time |
- A series and B series
- B-theory of time
- Chronocentrism
- Duration
- Endurantism
- Eternal return
- Eternalism
- Event
- Perdurantism
- Presentism
- Temporal finitism
- Temporal parts
- The Unreality of Time
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Human experience and use of time |
- Chronemics
- Generation time
- Mental chronometry
- Music
- Rosy retrospection
- Tense–aspect–mood
- Time management
- Yesterday – Today – Tomorrow
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| Time in science | | Geology | |
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| Physics | |
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| Other fields |
- Chronological dating
- Chronobiology
- Clock reaction
- Glottochronology
- Time geography
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| Related | |
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| International standards | | |
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| Obsolete standards | |
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| Time in physics | |
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| Horology | |
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| Calendar | |
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| Archaeology and geology | |
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| Astronomical chronology | |
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| Other units of time | |
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| Related topics |
- Chronology
- Duration
- Mental chronometry
- Decimal time
- Metric time
- System time
- Time metrology
- Time value of money
- Timekeeper
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