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==Introduction==
==Introduction==
Our everyday life follows the alternation of day and night, and seasons of year, and then the initial conception of time was based on the motion of sun. Nevertheless, as science and technology evolved, more precise uniform and well-defined time scales were needed. Several time references are currently adopted, based on different periodic processes associated with earth rotation, celestial mechanics or transitions between energetic levels in atomic oscillators. Table 1 summarises the different times systems used, with their associated periodic process.
Our everyday life follows the alternation of day and night, and seasons of year, and then the initial conception of time was based on the motion of sun. Nevertheless, as science and technology evolved, more precise uniform and well-defined time scales were needed. Several time references are currently adopted, based on different periodic processes associated with earth rotation, celestial mechanics or transitions between energetic levels in atomic oscillators. Table 1 summarises the different times systems used, with their associated periodic process.
[[File:Different time systems.png|none|thumb|400px|alt=Different time systems|'''Table 1:''' Different time systems (from [Hofmann-Wellenhof et al., 2003])]]
Universal and Sidereal times are associated with earth daily rotation. Universal time (solar time) uses the sun as a reference. Sidereal time uses the Vernal Equinox (the Aries point<ref group="footnote">Aries point is a fictitious direction pointing to the Aries Constellation about 2000 years ago. Due to the equinox precession, Aries point is continuously moving over the ecliptic (apparent orbit of sun relative to earth) by about 50′′26 each year, therefore in 2000 years it goes over an arc of 30&deg; in a retrograde way. Currently, Aries point is going out of Pisces Constellation and entering Aquarius.</ref>). This leads to the fact that, in a year, both times differ by 24 hours (one lap) and, thence, the sidereal day is shorter than the solar day by 3<sup>m</sup> 56<sup>s</sup>4. That is:

Revision as of 15:08, 23 January 2011


FundamentalsFundamentals
Title Time References
Author(s) J. Sanz Subirana, JM. Juan Zornoza and M. Hernandez-Pajares, University of Catalunia, Spain.
Level Basic
Year of Publication 2011

Introduction

Our everyday life follows the alternation of day and night, and seasons of year, and then the initial conception of time was based on the motion of sun. Nevertheless, as science and technology evolved, more precise uniform and well-defined time scales were needed. Several time references are currently adopted, based on different periodic processes associated with earth rotation, celestial mechanics or transitions between energetic levels in atomic oscillators. Table 1 summarises the different times systems used, with their associated periodic process.

Different time systems
Table 1: Different time systems (from [Hofmann-Wellenhof et al., 2003])

Universal and Sidereal times are associated with earth daily rotation. Universal time (solar time) uses the sun as a reference. Sidereal time uses the Vernal Equinox (the Aries point[footnote 1]). This leads to the fact that, in a year, both times differ by 24 hours (one lap) and, thence, the sidereal day is shorter than the solar day by 3m 56s4. That is:
Cite error: <ref> tags exist for a group named "footnote", but no corresponding <references group="footnote"/> tag was found