A time standard is a specification or standard of either the rate at which time passes, or points in time, or both. For example, the standard for civil time specifies both standard time intervals and time-of-day. A time scale specifies divisions of time.
Historically, time standards were based on the Earth's rotational period. However, the rate at which the Earth rotates is not constant. Earth rotational standards were first replaced by ones based on the period of Earth's orbit but, because its orbit is elliptical, the Earth moves faster when it is closer to the sun, so the orbital period is not constant either. Relatively recently, time interval standards based on very accurate and stable atomic clocks have replaced the previous standards base on the Earth's rotational and orbital speeds.
Various types of second and day are used as the basic time interval for most time scales. Other intervals of time (minutes, hours, and years) are usually defined in terms of these two.
Solar time is based on the solar day, which is the period of time between one solar noon and the next. A solar day is approximately 24 hours, on average. However, because the Earth's orbit around the sun is elliptical, and the day's variation depends on the observer's latitude, solar time varies as much as 15 minutes from mean solar time. There are also other perturbations such as the Earth's wobble, but these are less than a second per year.
Sidereal time is time by the stars. A sidereal day is the time it takes the Earth to make one revolution with respect to the stars. A sidereal day is approximately 23 hours 56 minutes 4 seconds.
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is time on the Prime Meridian. GMT used to be an international time standard. In that sense, technically, GMT no longer exists, although Universal Time is essentially what GMT used to be. Greenwich Mean Time also used to be the international standard for civil time. In that sense as well, GMT technically no longer exists, although GMT is still often used as a synonym for UTC, which is the international standard. The only sense in which Greenwich Mean Time technically still exists is as the name of a time zone.
Universal Time (UT) is a time scale based on the mean solar day, defined to be as uniform as possible despite variations in the rotation of the Earth.
Ephemeris time, dynamical time and coordinate time are all intended to provide a uniform time for planetary motion calculations.
International Atomic Time (TAI) is the primary international time standard from which other time standards, including UTC, are calculated. TAI is kept by the BIPM (International Bureau of Weights and Measures), and is based on the combined input of many atomic clocks around the world, each corrected for environmental and relativistic effects. It is the primary realisation of Terrestrial Time.
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is an atomic time scale designed to approximate Universal Time. UTC differs from TAI by an integral number of seconds. UTC is kept within 0.9 seconds of UT1 by the introduction of one-second steps to UTC, the "leap second". To date these steps have always been positive.
Standard time or civil time in a region deviates a fixed, round amount, usually a whole number of hours, from some form of Universal Time, now usually UTC. The offset is chosen such that a new day starts approximately while the sun is at the nadir. See Time zone. Alternatively the difference is not really fixed, but it changes twice a year a round amount, usually one hour, see Daylight saving time.
Julian day number is a count of days elapsed since Greenwich mean noon on 1 January 4713 B.C., Julian proleptic calendar. The Julian Date is the Julian day number followed by the fraction of the day elapsed since the preceding noon. Conveniently for astronomers, this avoids the date skip during an observation night.
Modified Julian day (MJD) is defined as MJD = JD - 2400000.5. An MJD day thus begins at midnight, civil date. Julian dates can be expressed in UT, TAI, TDT, etc. and so for precise applications the timescale should be specified, e.g. MJD 49135.3824 TAI.
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"Time standard".
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