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The hour (common symbol h or hr) is a unit of time. It is not an SI unit but is accepted for use with the SI.

Contents

Definition

In modern usage, a hour is a unit of measurement of time of the duration of 60 minutes, or 3600 seconds. It is 1/24 of a median Earth day. An hour in the Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) time standard can include a negative or positive leap second, and may therefore have a duration of 3599 or 3601seconds for adjustment purposes.

Etymology

Middle English ure first appears in the 13th century, as a loanword from Old French ure, ore, from Latin hora, ultimately from Greek á½¥Ïα "season, time of day, hour". Middle English ure, Anglo-French houre replaced Old English tíd (which survives as Modern English tide) and stund (Old High German stunta, from a Germanic *stundÅ "time, interval, while").

Greek á½¥Ïα is cognate to English year, both from a PIE *i̯ēro- "year, summer".

History

The hour was originally defined in ancient civilizations (including those of Egypt1, Sumer, India, and China) as either one twelfth of the time between sunrise and sunset or one twenty-fourth of a full daycitation needed.dubious

In either case the division reflected the widespread use of a duodecimal numbering system. The importance of 12 has been attributed to the number of lunar cycles in a year.

Astronomers in the Middle Kingdom (9th and 10th Dynasties) observed a set of 36 decan stars throughout the year. These star tables have been found on the lids of coffins of the period. The heliacal rising of the next decan star marked the start of a new civil week, which was then ten days. The period from sunset to sunrise was marked by 18 decan stars. Three of these were assigned to each of the two twilight periods, so the period of total darkness was marked by the remaining 12 decan stars, resulting in the 12 divisions of the night. The time between the appearance of each of these decan stars over the horizon during the night would have been about 40 modern minutes. During the New Kingdom, the system was simplified, using a set of 24 stars, 12 of which marked the passage of the night.

Earlier definitions of the hour varied within these parameters:

Counting hours

There are different ways of counting the hours:

Sunrise and sunset are much more conspicuous points in the day than noon or midnight; starting to count at these times was, for most people in most societies, much easier than starting at noon or midnight. However, with modern astronomical equipment (and the telegraph or similar means to transfer a time signal in a split-second), this issue is much less relevant.

Astrolabes, sundials, and astronomical clocks sometimes show the hour length and count using some of the older definitions and counting methods.

Further reading

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ National Institute of Standards and Technology - Time and Frequency FAQ, http://tf.nist.gov/general/history.htm, retrieved 2009-02-02 
  2. ^ There is a "trace" of that system, for instance, in Verdi's operas where in Rigoletto or in Un ballo in maschera midnight is announced by the bell striking 6 times, not 12 as we are accustomed to it today! But in his last opera, Falstaff, strangely, he abandoned that style, perhaps under influence of contemporary trends at end of 19th century when he composed it, and the midnight bell strikes 12 times.

The above article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the copyrighted Wikipedia "Hour" article.