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Day

A day is the time period of a full rotation of the Earth with respect to the Sun. On average, this is 24 hours, 1440 minutes, or 86,400 seconds. In everyday life, the word "day" often refers to a solar day, which is the length between two solar noons or times the Sun reaches the highest point. The word "day" may also refer to daytime, a time period when the location receives direct and indirect sunlight. On Earth, as a location passes through its day, it experiences morning, noon, afternoon, evening, and night. The effect of a day is vital to many life processes, which is called the circadian rhythm.

A quarter-day cycle at Midtown Manhattan, from afternoon to dusk

A collection of sequential days is organized into calendars as dates, almost always into weeks, months and years. Most calendars' arrangement of dates use either or both the Sun with its four seasons (solar calendar) or the Moon's phasing (lunar calendar). The start of a day is commonly accepted as roughly the time of the middle of the night or midnight, written as 00:00 or 12:00 am in 24- or 12-hour clocks, respectively. Because the time of midnight varies between locations, time zones are set up to facilitate the use of a uniform standard time. Midnight is not the only convention used to determine the start of a new day. Other defining moments have been used throughout history, and some are used even today, such as with the Jewish religious calendar, which counts days from sunset to sunset, so the Jewish Sabbath begins at sundown on Friday. Astronomers also have a convention where their day begins at high noon. This way, all of their observations throughout a single night are recorded as happening on the same day. This method removes ambiguity of a particular observation happening on a calendar day, eliminating the need to further determine which night it happened on. Because when using midnight as the start of day, each calendar day is associated with two separate night periods.

In specific applications, the definition of a day is slightly modified, such as in the ISQ day (exactly 86,400 seconds) used for computers and standards keeping, local mean time accounting of the Earth's natural fluctuation of a solar day, and stellar day and sidereal day (using the celestial sphere) used for astronomy. In most countries outside of the tropics, daylight saving time is practiced, and each year there will be one 23-hour civil day and one 25-hour civil day. Due to slight variations in the rotation of the Earth, there are rare times when a leap second will get inserted at the end of a UTC day, and so while almost all days have a duration of 86,400 seconds, there are these exceptional cases of a day with 86,401 seconds (in the half-century spanning 1972 through 2022, there have been a total of 27 leap seconds that have been inserted, so roughly once every other year).

Etymology

The term comes from the Old English term dæġ (/dæj/), with its cognates such as dagur in Icelandic, Tag in German, and dag in Norwegian, Danish, Swedish and Dutch – all stemming from a Proto-Germanic root *dagaz.[1] As of October 17, 2015, day is the 205th most common word in US English,[2] and the 210th most common in UK English.[2]

Definitions

Apparent and mean solar day

 
Earth's rotation imaged by Deep Space Climate Observatory, showing axis tilt

Several definitions of this universal human concept are used according to context, need and convenience. Besides the day of 24 hours (86,400 seconds), the word day is used for several different spans of time based on the rotation of the Earth around its axis. An important one is the solar day, defined as the time it takes for the Sun to return to its culmination point (its highest point in the sky). Because celestial orbits are not perfectly circular, and thus objects travel at different speeds at various positions in their orbit, a solar day is not the same length of time throughout the orbital year. Because the Earth moves along an eccentric orbit around the Sun while the Earth spins on an inclined axis, this period can be up to 7.9 seconds more than (or less than) 24 hours. In recent decades, the average length of a solar day on Earth has been about 86,400.002 seconds[3] (24.000 000 6 hours) and there are currently about 365.2421875 solar days in one mean tropical year.

Ancient custom has a new day start at either the rising or setting of the Sun on the local horizon (Italian reckoning, for example, being 24 hours from sunset, oldstyle).[4] The exact moment of, and the interval between, two sunrises or sunsets depends on the geographical position (longitude and latitude, as well as altitude), and the time of year (as indicated by ancient hemispherical sundials).

A more constant day can be defined by the Sun passing through the local meridian, which happens at local noon (upper culmination) or midnight (lower culmination). The exact moment is dependent on the geographical longitude, and to a lesser extent on the time of the year. The length of such a day is nearly constant (24 hours ± 30 seconds). This is the time as indicated by modern sundials.

A further improvement defines a fictitious mean Sun that moves with constant speed along the celestial equator; the speed is the same as the average speed of the real Sun, but this removes the variation over a year as the Earth moves along its orbit around the Sun (due to both its velocity and its axial tilt).

In terms of Earth's rotation, the average day length is about 360.9856°. A day lasts for more than 360° of rotation because of the Earth's revolution around the Sun. With a full year being slightly more than 360 days, the Earth's daily orbit around the Sun is slightly less than 1°, so the day is slightly less than 361° of rotation.

Elsewhere in the Solar System or other parts of the universe, a day is a full rotation of other large astronomical objects with respect to its star.[5]

Civil day

For civil purposes, a common clock time is typically defined for an entire region based on the local mean solar time at a central meridian. Such time zones began to be adopted about the middle of the 19th century when railroads with regularly occurring schedules came into use, with most major countries having adopted them by 1929. As of 2015, throughout the world, 40 such zones are now in use: the central zone, from which all others are defined as offsets, is known as UTC±00, which uses Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).

The most common convention starts the civil day at midnight: this is near the time of the lower culmination of the Sun on the central meridian of the time zone. Such a day may be referred to as a calendar day.

A day is commonly divided into 24 hours of 60 minutes, with each minute composed of 60 seconds.

Sidereal day

 
Rotation of Ceres, the largest dwarf planet

A sidereal day or stellar day is the span of time it takes for the Earth to make one entire rotation[6] with respect to the celestial background or a distant star (assumed to be fixed).[7] Measuring a day as such is used in astronomy.[7] A sidereal day is about 4 minutes less than a solar day of 24 hours (23 hours 56 minutes and 4.09 seconds), or 0.99726968 of a solar day of 24 hours.[8] There are about 366.2422 stellar days in one mean tropical year (one stellar day more than the number of solar days).[9]

Besides a stellar day on Earth, other bodies in the Solar System have day times, the durations of these being:[10][11]

Name Daylength (hours)
Mercury 4222.6
Venus 2802
Earth's Moon 708.7
Mars 24.7
Ceres 9[12]–9.1[13]
Jupiter 9.9
Saturn 10.7
Uranus 17.2
Neptune 16.1
Pluto 153.3

In the International System of Units

In the International System of Units (SI), a day not an official unit, but is accepted for use with SI.[14] A day, with symbol d, is defined using SI units as 86,400 seconds; the second is the base unit of time in SI units. In 1967–68, during the 13th CGPM (Resolution 1),[15] the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) redefined a second as "... the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom."[16] This makes the SI-based day last exactly 794,243,384,928,000 of those periods.

In decimal and metric time

 
Decimal clock face, made in around the start of the 19th century

Various decimal or metric time proposals have been made, but do not redefine the day, and use the day or sidereal day as a base unit. Metric time uses metric prefixes to keep time. It uses the day as the base unit, and smaller units being fractions of a day: a metric hour (deci) is 110 of a day; a metric minute (milli) is 11000 of a day; etc.[17] Similarly, in decimal time, the length of a day is static to normal time. A day is also split into 10 hours, and 10 days comprise a décade – the equivalent to a week. 3 décades make a month.[18]: 35  Various decimal time proposals which do not redefine the day: Henri de Sarrauton's proposal kept days, and subdivided hours into 100 minutes;[18]: 42  in Mendizábal y Tamborel's proposal, the sidereal day was the basic unit, with subdivisions made upon it;[18]: 42–43  and Rey-Pailhade's proposal divided the day 100 cés.[18]: 42 

Other definitions

The word refers to various similarly defined ideas, such as:

Full day
  • 24 hours (exactly) (a nychthemeron)
  • A day counting approximation, for example "See you in three days." or "the following day"
  • The full day covering both the dark and light periods, beginning from the start of the dark period or from a point near the middle of the dark period
  • A full dark and light period, sometimes called a nychthemeron in English, from the Greek for night-day;[19] or more colloquially the term 24 hours. In other languages, 24 hours is also often used. Other languages also have a separate word for a full day.
  • Part of a date: the day of the year (doy) in ordinal dates, day of the month (dom) in calendar dates or day of the week (dow) in week dates.
  • Time regularly spend at paid work on a single work day, cf. man-day and workweek.
Daytime
  • The period of light when the Sun is above the local horizon (that is, the time period from sunrise to sunset)
  • The time period from 06:00–18:00 (6:00 am – 6:00 pm) or 21:00 (9:00 pm) or another fixed clock period overlapping or offset from other time periods such as "morning", "evening", or "night".
  • The time period from first-light "dawn" to last-light "dusk".
Other
  • A specific period of the day, which may vary by context, such as "the school day" or "the work day".

Variations in length

Mainly due to tidal deceleration – the Moon's gravitational pull slowing down the Earth's rotation – the Earth's rotational period is slowing.[20] Because of the way the second is defined, the mean length of a solar day is now about 86,400.002 seconds, and is increasing by about 2 milliseconds per century.[21]

Since the rotation rate of the Earth is slowing, the length of a SI second fell out of sync with a second derived from the rotational period of the earth.[20] This arose the need for leap seconds, which insert extra seconds into Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).[20] Although typically 86,400 SI seconds in duration, a civil day can be either 86,401 or 86,399 SI seconds long on such a day. Other than the two-millisecond variation from tidal deceleration, other factors minutely affect the day's length, which creates irregularity in the placement of leap seconds.[22] Leap seconds are announced in advance by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS), which measures the Earth's rotation and determines whether a leap second is necessary.

Geological day lengths

Discovered by paleontologist John W. Wells, the day lengths of geological periods have been estimated by measuring sedimentation rings in coral fossils,[23][21] due to some biological systems being affected by the tide.[21] The length of a day at the Earth's formation is estimated at 6 hours.[21] Arbab I. Arbab plotted day lengths over time and found a curved line.[21] Arbab attributed this to the change of water volume present affecting Earth's rotation.[21]

Date Geological period Number of days per year[23] Duration of the day
Present Current 365 24 hours
−100 million years Cretaceous 380 23 hours and 20 minutes
−200 million years Triassic 390 22 hours and 40 minutes
−300 million years Carboniferous 400 22 hours
−400 million years Devonian 410 21 hours and 20 minutes
−500 million years Cambrian 425 20 hours and 40 minutes

Boundaries

 
Sun and Moon, Hartmann Schedel's Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493

For most diurnal animals, the day naturally begins at dawn and ends at sunset. Humans, with their cultural norms and scientific knowledge, have employed several different conceptions of the day's boundaries. In the Hebrew Bible, Genesis 1:5 defines a day in terms of "evening" and "morning" before recounting the creation of a sun to illuminate it: "And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day." Common convention among the ancient Romans,[24] ancient Chinese[25] and in modern times is for the civil day to begin at midnight, i.e. 00:00, and to last a full 24 hours until 24:00 (i.e. 00:00 of the next day). In ancient Egypt the day was reckoned from sunrise to sunrise. The Jewish day begins at either sunset or nightfall (when three second-magnitude stars appear).

Medieval Europe also followed this tradition, known as Florentine reckoning: in this system, a reference like "two hours into the day" meant two hours after sunset and thus times during the evening need to be shifted back one calendar day in modern reckoning.[citation needed] Days such as Christmas Eve, Halloween, and the Eve of Saint Agnes are remnants of the older pattern when holidays began during the prior evening. Prior to 1926, Turkey had two time systems: Turkish (counting the hours from sunset) and French (counting the hours from midnight).

Parts

Humans have divided the day in rough periods, which can have cultural implications, and other effects on humans' biological processes. The parts of the day do not have set times; they can vary by lifestyle or hours of daylight in a given place.[26]

Daytime

A day, in the sense of daytime that is distinguished from night time, is commonly defined as the period during which sunlight directly reaches the ground, assuming that there are no local obstacles. The length of daytime averages slightly more than half of the 24-hour day. Two effects make daytime on average longer than nights. The Sun is not a point, but has an apparent size of about 32 minutes of arc. Additionally, the atmosphere refracts sunlight in such a way that some of it reaches the ground even when the Sun is below the horizon by about 34 minutes of arc. So the first light reaches the ground when the centre of the Sun is still below the horizon by about 50 minutes of arc.[27] Thus, daytime is on average around 7 minutes longer than 12 hours.[28]

Daytime is further distinguished into morning, afternoon, and evening. Morning occurs between sunrise and noon.[29] Afternoon occurs between noon and sunset.[30] This period of time sees human's highest body temperature,[31] an increase of traffic collisions,[32] and a decrease of productivity.[33] Evening occurs between the end of afternoon and before sleep.[34]

Twilight

 
Twilight in Port of Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Twilight is the period before sunset and after sunrise in which there is natural light but no direct sunlight.[35] Twilight can be subdivided into dawn or dusk, or into civil twilight, nautical twilight, and astronomical twilight. Civil twilight begins when the sun is 6 degrees below the horizon; nautical begins at 12 degrees, and astronomical begins at 18 degrees.[36]

Night

Night is the period in which the sky is dark,[37] or the period between dusk and dawn where no light is visible.[38] Due to the darkness of night, it affects the circadian rhythm; artificial light during night can disrupt circadian rhythms and sleep.[39]

See also

References

  1. ^ Mallory, James P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-19-929668-2.
  2. ^ a b . Oxford Dictionaries Online (ODO). Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2016-01-25. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  3. ^ "Earth Orientation Parameters". International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service. from the original on April 26, 2015.
  4. ^ L. Holford-Stevens, The History of Time (Oxford 2005) p. 6
  5. ^ "day". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 2022-07-10. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  6. ^ Certain authors caution against identifying "day" with rotation period. For example: Seligman, Courtney. "Rotation Period and Day Length". from the original on 2018-09-29. Retrieved 2011-06-03. A Cautionary Note: Because the rotation period of the Earth is almost the same as the length of its day, we sometimes get a bit sloppy in discussing the rotation of the sky, and say that the stars rotate around us once each day. In a similar way, it is not unusual for careless people to mix up the rotation period of a planet with the length of its day, or vice versa.
  7. ^ a b "sidereal day". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 2022-09-26. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  8. ^ Allen, Clabon Walter & Cox, Arthur N. (2000). Allen's Astrophysical Quantities. Springer. p. 296. ISBN 0-387-98746-0. from the original on 2011-12-09. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  9. ^ Komhyr, Walter Dmyro (June 1980). "Operations Handbook - Ozone Observations with a Dobson Spectrophotometer". gml.noaa.gov. p. 122. from the original on 2021-06-12. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  10. ^ "Planetary Fact Sheet - Metric". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov NASA. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  11. ^ Griggs, Mary Beth (18 January 2019). "Shaky rings help scientists measure Saturn's days – Speedy planet". The Verge. from the original on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  12. ^ "planets/dwarf-planets/ceres/in-depth". nasa.gov. from the original on June 2, 2021. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  13. ^ Tate, Karl (21 November 2012). "Dwarf Planets of Our Solar System (Infographic)". www.space.com. from the original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  14. ^ BIPM (2014) [2006]. . SI Brochure (8th ed.). Archived from the original on 2014-11-11. Retrieved 2015-01-27.
  15. ^ . Resolution 1 of the 13th CGPM (1967/68). Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM). Archived from the original on 2011-01-10. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  16. ^ "Unit of Time (Second)". SI Brochure: The International System of Units (SI) (8 ed.). Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM). 2014 [2006]. from the original on 2018-06-13. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  17. ^ Veitch, Harriet (2008-04-02). "Why don't we have metric time?". The Sydney Morning Herald. from the original on 2022-08-21. Retrieved 2022-08-21.
  18. ^ a b c d Vera, Hector (2009). "Decimal Time: Misadventures of a Revolutionary Idea, 1793–2008". KronoScope. 9 (1–2): 29–48. doi:10.1163/156771509X12638154745382. ISSN 1567-715X. from the original on 2022-08-21. Retrieved 2022-08-21.
  19. ^ "Definition of NYCHTHEMERON". www.merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-02-01.
  20. ^ a b c McCarthy, Dennis D.; Hackman, Christine; Nelson, Robert A. (2008-11-01). "The Physical Basis of the Leap Second". The Astronomical Journal. 136 (5): 1906–1908. Bibcode:2008AJ....136.1906M. doi:10.1088/0004-6256/136/5/1906. ISSN 0004-6256. S2CID 124701789. from the original on 2022-05-31. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Arbab, Arbab I. (January 2009). "The Length of the Day: A Cosmological Perspective" (PDF). Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Khartoum. 1. (PDF) from the original on 2022-08-20. Retrieved 2022-08-20.
  22. ^ "IERS science background". Frankfurt am Main: IERS. 2013. from the original on August 29, 2016. Retrieved August 6, 2016.
  23. ^ a b J.Kovalesky Bureau des Longitudes (1969). "Paléo-Astronomie". L'Astronomie. 83: 411. Bibcode:1969LAstr..83..411K. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  24. ^ See Plutarch, Quaestiones Romanae, 84. 2021-02-09 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ s:zh:清史稿/卷48: 起子正,盡夜子初
  26. ^ "Parts of the Day: Early morning, late morning, etc". Britannica Dictionary. from the original on 2022-08-22. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  27. ^ 32′2 + 34′ = 50′
  28. ^ 50°/60 ÷ 360° × 2(for sunrise and set) × 24 hours ≈ 7 min
  29. ^ "Definition of MORNING". www.merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2022-08-22. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  30. ^ "Definition of AFTERNOON". www.merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2022-08-22. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  31. ^ Refinetti, Roberto (2006). Circadian Physiology (2nd ed.). Taylor & Francis Group. p. 556. ISBN 978-0-8493-2233-4.
  32. ^ McCabe, Paul T. (2004). Contemporary Ergonomics. CRC Press. p. 588. ISBN 0-8493-2342-8.
  33. ^ Ray, James T. (1960). Human Performance as a Function of the Work–Rest Cycle. National Academy of Sciences. p. 11.
  34. ^ "Definition of 'evening'". Collins Dictionary. from the original on 2021-05-01. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  35. ^ . USNO. Archived from the original on 2019-09-27. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
  36. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-29.
  37. ^ "night". Cambridge Dictionary. from the original on 2022-04-01. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  38. ^ "Definition of NIGHT". www.merriam-webster.com. from the original on 2022-08-22. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  39. ^ Blume, Christine; Garbazza, Corrado; Spitschan, Manuel (2019). "Effects of light on human circadian rhythms, sleep and mood". Somnologie. 23 (3): 147–156. doi:10.1007/s11818-019-00215-x. ISSN 1432-9123. PMC 6751071. PMID 31534436.

External links

  •   Media related to Day at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The dictionary definition of day at Wiktionary
  •   Quotations related to Day at Wikiquote

other, uses, disambiguation, time, period, full, rotation, earth, with, respect, average, this, hours, 1440, minutes, seconds, everyday, life, word, often, refers, solar, which, length, between, solar, noons, times, reaches, highest, point, word, also, refer, . For other uses see Day disambiguation A day is the time period of a full rotation of the Earth with respect to the Sun On average this is 24 hours 1440 minutes or 86 400 seconds In everyday life the word day often refers to a solar day which is the length between two solar noons or times the Sun reaches the highest point The word day may also refer to daytime a time period when the location receives direct and indirect sunlight On Earth as a location passes through its day it experiences morning noon afternoon evening and night The effect of a day is vital to many life processes which is called the circadian rhythm A quarter day cycle at Midtown Manhattan from afternoon to dusk A collection of sequential days is organized into calendars as dates almost always into weeks months and years Most calendars arrangement of dates use either or both the Sun with its four seasons solar calendar or the Moon s phasing lunar calendar The start of a day is commonly accepted as roughly the time of the middle of the night or midnight written as 00 00 or 12 00 am in 24 or 12 hour clocks respectively Because the time of midnight varies between locations time zones are set up to facilitate the use of a uniform standard time Midnight is not the only convention used to determine the start of a new day Other defining moments have been used throughout history and some are used even today such as with the Jewish religious calendar which counts days from sunset to sunset so the Jewish Sabbath begins at sundown on Friday Astronomers also have a convention where their day begins at high noon This way all of their observations throughout a single night are recorded as happening on the same day This method removes ambiguity of a particular observation happening on a calendar day eliminating the need to further determine which night it happened on Because when using midnight as the start of day each calendar day is associated with two separate night periods In specific applications the definition of a day is slightly modified such as in the ISQ day exactly 86 400 seconds used for computers and standards keeping local mean time accounting of the Earth s natural fluctuation of a solar day and stellar day and sidereal day using the celestial sphere used for astronomy In most countries outside of the tropics daylight saving time is practiced and each year there will be one 23 hour civil day and one 25 hour civil day Due to slight variations in the rotation of the Earth there are rare times when a leap second will get inserted at the end of a UTC day and so while almost all days have a duration of 86 400 seconds there are these exceptional cases of a day with 86 401 seconds in the half century spanning 1972 through 2022 there have been a total of 27 leap seconds that have been inserted so roughly once every other year Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definitions 2 1 Apparent and mean solar day 2 1 1 Civil day 2 2 Sidereal day 2 3 In the International System of Units 2 4 In decimal and metric time 2 5 Other definitions 3 Variations in length 3 1 Geological day lengths 4 Boundaries 5 Parts 5 1 Daytime 5 2 Twilight 5 3 Night 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology EditThe term comes from the Old English term daeġ daej with its cognates such as dagur in Icelandic Tag in German and dag in Norwegian Danish Swedish and Dutch all stemming from a Proto Germanic root dagaz 1 As of October 17 2015 update day is the 205th most common word in US English 2 and the 210th most common in UK English 2 Definitions EditApparent and mean solar day Edit Earth s rotation imaged by Deep Space Climate Observatory showing axis tilt Several definitions of this universal human concept are used according to context need and convenience Besides the day of 24 hours 86 400 seconds the word day is used for several different spans of time based on the rotation of the Earth around its axis An important one is the solar day defined as the time it takes for the Sun to return to its culmination point its highest point in the sky Because celestial orbits are not perfectly circular and thus objects travel at different speeds at various positions in their orbit a solar day is not the same length of time throughout the orbital year Because the Earth moves along an eccentric orbit around the Sun while the Earth spins on an inclined axis this period can be up to 7 9 seconds more than or less than 24 hours In recent decades the average length of a solar day on Earth has been about 86 400 002 seconds 3 24 000 000 6 hours and there are currently about 365 2421875 solar days in one mean tropical year Ancient custom has a new day start at either the rising or setting of the Sun on the local horizon Italian reckoning for example being 24 hours from sunset oldstyle 4 The exact moment of and the interval between two sunrises or sunsets depends on the geographical position longitude and latitude as well as altitude and the time of year as indicated by ancient hemispherical sundials A more constant day can be defined by the Sun passing through the local meridian which happens at local noon upper culmination or midnight lower culmination The exact moment is dependent on the geographical longitude and to a lesser extent on the time of the year The length of such a day is nearly constant 24 hours 30 seconds This is the time as indicated by modern sundials A further improvement defines a fictitious mean Sun that moves with constant speed along the celestial equator the speed is the same as the average speed of the real Sun but this removes the variation over a year as the Earth moves along its orbit around the Sun due to both its velocity and its axial tilt In terms of Earth s rotation the average day length is about 360 9856 A day lasts for more than 360 of rotation because of the Earth s revolution around the Sun With a full year being slightly more than 360 days the Earth s daily orbit around the Sun is slightly less than 1 so the day is slightly less than 361 of rotation Elsewhere in the Solar System or other parts of the universe a day is a full rotation of other large astronomical objects with respect to its star 5 Civil day Edit For civil purposes a common clock time is typically defined for an entire region based on the local mean solar time at a central meridian Such time zones began to be adopted about the middle of the 19th century when railroads with regularly occurring schedules came into use with most major countries having adopted them by 1929 As of 2015 throughout the world 40 such zones are now in use the central zone from which all others are defined as offsets is known as UTC 00 which uses Coordinated Universal Time UTC The most common convention starts the civil day at midnight this is near the time of the lower culmination of the Sun on the central meridian of the time zone Such a day may be referred to as a calendar day A day is commonly divided into 24 hours of 60 minutes with each minute composed of 60 seconds Sidereal day Edit Main articles Earth s rotation Stellar day Sidereal time and Rotation period Rotation of Ceres the largest dwarf planet A sidereal day or stellar day is the span of time it takes for the Earth to make one entire rotation 6 with respect to the celestial background or a distant star assumed to be fixed 7 Measuring a day as such is used in astronomy 7 A sidereal day is about 4 minutes less than a solar day of 24 hours 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 09 seconds or 0 99726968 of a solar day of 24 hours 8 There are about 366 2422 stellar days in one mean tropical year one stellar day more than the number of solar days 9 Besides a stellar day on Earth other bodies in the Solar System have day times the durations of these being 10 11 Name Daylength hours Mercury 4222 6Venus 2802Earth s Moon 708 7Mars 24 7Ceres 9 12 9 1 13 Jupiter 9 9Saturn 10 7Uranus 17 2Neptune 16 1Pluto 153 3In the International System of Units Edit Main article International System of Units In the International System of Units SI a day not an official unit but is accepted for use with SI 14 A day with symbol d is defined using SI units as 86 400 seconds the second is the base unit of time in SI units In 1967 68 during the 13th CGPM Resolution 1 15 the International Bureau of Weights and Measures BIPM redefined a second as the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom 16 This makes the SI based day last exactly 794 243 384 928 000 of those periods In decimal and metric time Edit Main articles decimal time and Metric time Decimal clock face made in around the start of the 19th century Various decimal or metric time proposals have been made but do not redefine the day and use the day or sidereal day as a base unit Metric time uses metric prefixes to keep time It uses the day as the base unit and smaller units being fractions of a day a metric hour deci is 1 10 of a day a metric minute milli is 1 1000 of a day etc 17 Similarly in decimal time the length of a day is static to normal time A day is also split into 10 hours and 10 days comprise a decade the equivalent to a week 3 decades make a month 18 35 Various decimal time proposals which do not redefine the day Henri de Sarrauton s proposal kept days and subdivided hours into 100 minutes 18 42 in Mendizabal y Tamborel s proposal the sidereal day was the basic unit with subdivisions made upon it 18 42 43 and Rey Pailhade s proposal divided the day 100 ces 18 42 Other definitions Edit The word refers to various similarly defined ideas such as Full day24 hours exactly a nychthemeron A day counting approximation for example See you in three days or the following day The full day covering both the dark and light periods beginning from the start of the dark period or from a point near the middle of the dark period A full dark and light period sometimes called a nychthemeron in English from the Greek for night day 19 or more colloquially the term 24 hours In other languages 24 hours is also often used Other languages also have a separate word for a full day Part of a date the day of the year doy in ordinal dates day of the month dom in calendar dates or day of the week dow in week dates Time regularly spend at paid work on a single work day cf man day and workweek DaytimeThe period of light when the Sun is above the local horizon that is the time period from sunrise to sunset The time period from 06 00 18 00 6 00 am 6 00 pm or 21 00 9 00 pm or another fixed clock period overlapping or offset from other time periods such as morning evening or night The time period from first light dawn to last light dusk OtherA specific period of the day which may vary by context such as the school day or the work day Variations in length EditFurther information Leap second and Tidal acceleration Mainly due to tidal deceleration the Moon s gravitational pull slowing down the Earth s rotation the Earth s rotational period is slowing 20 Because of the way the second is defined the mean length of a solar day is now about 86 400 002 seconds and is increasing by about 2 milliseconds per century 21 Since the rotation rate of the Earth is slowing the length of a SI second fell out of sync with a second derived from the rotational period of the earth 20 This arose the need for leap seconds which insert extra seconds into Coordinated Universal Time UTC 20 Although typically 86 400 SI seconds in duration a civil day can be either 86 401 or 86 399 SI seconds long on such a day Other than the two millisecond variation from tidal deceleration other factors minutely affect the day s length which creates irregularity in the placement of leap seconds 22 Leap seconds are announced in advance by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service IERS which measures the Earth s rotation and determines whether a leap second is necessary Geological day lengths Edit Discovered by paleontologist John W Wells the day lengths of geological periods have been estimated by measuring sedimentation rings in coral fossils 23 21 due to some biological systems being affected by the tide 21 The length of a day at the Earth s formation is estimated at 6 hours 21 Arbab I Arbab plotted day lengths over time and found a curved line 21 Arbab attributed this to the change of water volume present affecting Earth s rotation 21 Date Geological period Number of days per year 23 Duration of the dayPresent Current 365 24 hours 100 million years Cretaceous 380 23 hours and 20 minutes 200 million years Triassic 390 22 hours and 40 minutes 300 million years Carboniferous 400 22 hours 400 million years Devonian 410 21 hours and 20 minutes 500 million years Cambrian 425 20 hours and 40 minutesBoundaries Edit Sun and Moon Hartmann Schedel s Nuremberg Chronicle 1493 For most diurnal animals the day naturally begins at dawn and ends at sunset Humans with their cultural norms and scientific knowledge have employed several different conceptions of the day s boundaries In the Hebrew Bible Genesis 1 5 defines a day in terms of evening and morning before recounting the creation of a sun to illuminate it And God called the light Day and the darkness he called Night And the evening and the morning were the first day Common convention among the ancient Romans 24 ancient Chinese 25 and in modern times is for the civil day to begin at midnight i e 00 00 and to last a full 24 hours until 24 00 i e 00 00 of the next day In ancient Egypt the day was reckoned from sunrise to sunrise The Jewish day begins at either sunset or nightfall when three second magnitude stars appear Medieval Europe also followed this tradition known as Florentine reckoning in this system a reference like two hours into the day meant two hours after sunset and thus times during the evening need to be shifted back one calendar day in modern reckoning citation needed Days such as Christmas Eve Halloween and the Eve of Saint Agnes are remnants of the older pattern when holidays began during the prior evening Prior to 1926 Turkey had two time systems Turkish counting the hours from sunset and French counting the hours from midnight Parts EditSee also Category Parts of a day Humans have divided the day in rough periods which can have cultural implications and other effects on humans biological processes The parts of the day do not have set times they can vary by lifestyle or hours of daylight in a given place 26 Daytime Edit Main article Daytime A day in the sense of daytime that is distinguished from night time is commonly defined as the period during which sunlight directly reaches the ground assuming that there are no local obstacles The length of daytime averages slightly more than half of the 24 hour day Two effects make daytime on average longer than nights The Sun is not a point but has an apparent size of about 32 minutes of arc Additionally the atmosphere refracts sunlight in such a way that some of it reaches the ground even when the Sun is below the horizon by about 34 minutes of arc So the first light reaches the ground when the centre of the Sun is still below the horizon by about 50 minutes of arc 27 Thus daytime is on average around 7 minutes longer than 12 hours 28 Daytime is further distinguished into morning afternoon and evening Morning occurs between sunrise and noon 29 Afternoon occurs between noon and sunset 30 This period of time sees human s highest body temperature 31 an increase of traffic collisions 32 and a decrease of productivity 33 Evening occurs between the end of afternoon and before sleep 34 Twilight Edit Main article Twilight Twilight in Port of Kaohsiung Taiwan Twilight is the period before sunset and after sunrise in which there is natural light but no direct sunlight 35 Twilight can be subdivided into dawn or dusk or into civil twilight nautical twilight and astronomical twilight Civil twilight begins when the sun is 6 degrees below the horizon nautical begins at 12 degrees and astronomical begins at 18 degrees 36 Night in art Night Edit Main article Night Night is the period in which the sky is dark 37 or the period between dusk and dawn where no light is visible 38 Due to the darkness of night it affects the circadian rhythm artificial light during night can disrupt circadian rhythms and sleep 39 See also EditDetermination of the day of the week Holiday ISO 8601 Season for a discussion of daylight and darkness at various latitudes Synodic day World Meteorological dayReferences Edit Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 124 ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 a b English Words Oxford Dictionaries Online ODO Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 2016 01 25 Retrieved 2015 10 17 Earth Orientation Parameters International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service Archived from the original on April 26 2015 L Holford Stevens The History of Time Oxford 2005 p 6 day Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2022 07 10 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Certain authors caution against identifying day with rotation period For example Seligman Courtney Rotation Period and Day Length Archived from the original on 2018 09 29 Retrieved 2011 06 03 A Cautionary Note Because the rotation period of the Earth is almost the same as the length of its day we sometimes get a bit sloppy in discussing the rotation of the sky and say that the stars rotate around us once each day In a similar way it is not unusual for careless people to mix up the rotation period of a planet with the length of its day or vice versa a b sidereal day Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2022 09 26 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Allen Clabon Walter amp Cox Arthur N 2000 Allen s Astrophysical Quantities Springer p 296 ISBN 0 387 98746 0 Archived from the original on 2011 12 09 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Komhyr Walter Dmyro June 1980 Operations Handbook Ozone Observations with a Dobson Spectrophotometer gml noaa gov p 122 Archived from the original on 2021 06 12 Retrieved 2022 08 17 Planetary Fact Sheet Metric nssdc gsfc nasa gov NASA Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved May 29 2021 Griggs Mary Beth 18 January 2019 Shaky rings help scientists measure Saturn s days Speedy planet The Verge Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 18 January 2019 planets dwarf planets ceres in depth nasa gov Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 30 2021 Tate Karl 21 November 2012 Dwarf Planets of Our Solar System Infographic www space com Archived from the original on 18 May 2021 Retrieved May 30 2021 BIPM 2014 2006 Non SI units accepted for use with the SI and units based on fundamental constants SI Brochure 8th ed Archived from the original on 2014 11 11 Retrieved 2015 01 27 SI Unit of Time Second Resolution 1 of the 13th CGPM 1967 68 Bureau International des Poids et Mesures BIPM Archived from the original on 2011 01 10 Retrieved 2015 10 17 Unit of Time Second SI Brochure The International System of Units SI 8 ed Bureau International des Poids et Mesures BIPM 2014 2006 Archived from the original on 2018 06 13 Retrieved 2015 10 17 Veitch Harriet 2008 04 02 Why don t we have metric time The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 2022 08 21 Retrieved 2022 08 21 a b c d Vera Hector 2009 Decimal Time Misadventures of a Revolutionary Idea 1793 2008 KronoScope 9 1 2 29 48 doi 10 1163 156771509X12638154745382 ISSN 1567 715X Archived from the original on 2022 08 21 Retrieved 2022 08 21 Definition of NYCHTHEMERON www merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2017 02 01 a b c McCarthy Dennis D Hackman Christine Nelson Robert A 2008 11 01 The Physical Basis of the Leap Second The Astronomical Journal 136 5 1906 1908 Bibcode 2008AJ 136 1906M doi 10 1088 0004 6256 136 5 1906 ISSN 0004 6256 S2CID 124701789 Archived from the original on 2022 05 31 Retrieved 2022 08 20 a b c d e f Arbab Arbab I January 2009 The Length of the Day A Cosmological Perspective PDF Department of Physics Faculty of Science University of Khartoum 1 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 08 20 Retrieved 2022 08 20 IERS science background Frankfurt am Main IERS 2013 Archived from the original on August 29 2016 Retrieved August 6 2016 a b J Kovalesky Bureau des Longitudes 1969 Paleo Astronomie L Astronomie 83 411 Bibcode 1969LAstr 83 411K Archived from the original on 21 December 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2021 See Plutarch Quaestiones Romanae 84 Archived 2021 02 09 at the Wayback Machine s zh 清史稿 卷48 起子正 盡夜子初 Parts of the Day Early morning late morning etc Britannica Dictionary Archived from the original on 2022 08 22 Retrieved 2022 08 22 32 2 34 50 50 60 360 2 for sunrise and set 24 hours 7 min Definition of MORNING www merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2022 08 22 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Definition of AFTERNOON www merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2022 08 22 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Refinetti Roberto 2006 Circadian Physiology 2nd ed Taylor amp Francis Group p 556 ISBN 978 0 8493 2233 4 McCabe Paul T 2004 Contemporary Ergonomics CRC Press p 588 ISBN 0 8493 2342 8 Ray James T 1960 Human Performance as a Function of the Work Rest Cycle National Academy of Sciences p 11 Definition of evening Collins Dictionary Archived from the original on 2021 05 01 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Definitions from the US Astronomical Applications Dept USNO Archived from the original on 2019 09 27 Retrieved 2011 07 22 Glossary of Marine Navigation PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 29 night Cambridge Dictionary Archived from the original on 2022 04 01 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Definition of NIGHT www merriam webster com Archived from the original on 2022 08 22 Retrieved 2022 08 22 Blume Christine Garbazza Corrado Spitschan Manuel 2019 Effects of light on human circadian rhythms sleep and mood Somnologie 23 3 147 156 doi 10 1007 s11818 019 00215 x ISSN 1432 9123 PMC 6751071 PMID 31534436 External links Edit Media related to Day at Wikimedia Commons The dictionary definition of day at Wiktionary Quotations related to Day at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Day amp oldid 1130995454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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