Details, Explanation and Meaning About Hour

Hour Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

In modern usage, an hour is defined as a unit of time 60 minutes, or 3600 seconds in length. It is approximately 1/24 of a median Earth day.

There is also the hour of right ascension, a unit of both time and angle.

Earlier definitions of the hour:

  • One twelfth of the time from sunrise to sunset. As a consequence, hours on summer days are longer than on winter days. For this reason, these hours are sometimes called unequal hours. Romans and Greeks used this definition and divided the night into three or four night watches. Later, the night (i. e., the time between sunset and sunrise) was also divided into twelve hours. When a clock showed these hours, its speed had to be changed every morning and evening (for example by changing the length of its pendulum), or it had to keep position of the Sun on ecliptic (see Prague Astronomical Clock).
  • One twenty-fourth of the apparent solar day (between one noon and the next, or between one sunset and the next). As a consequence, hours vary a little, as the length of an apparent solar day varies throughout the year. When a clock showed these hours, it had to be adjusted a few times in a month.
  • One twenty-fourth of the mean solar day. See mean sun for more information on the difference to the apparent solar day. When an exact clock showed these hours, it had te be adjusted virtually never. However, as earth rotation slows down, this definition has been abandoned. See UTC.

Counting hours

Every definition of the hour came with its own starting point for counting the hours.

Sunrise and sunset are much more conspicuous points in day than noon or midnight; starting to count then is much easier than starting at noon or midnight. With modern astronomic equipment (and the telegraph or similar means to transfer a time sign in a split-second), this issue is no more relevant.

Sundials often show the hour length and count according to some of the older definitions and countings.

The division of the day into 12 hours dates back to the Sumerians. There are probably 12 hours because there are approximately 12 lunar months in a solar year. Symmetries of this sort are common in ancient units of measurement.

See also


This is an Article on Hour. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Hour


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