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For the astronomical unit of measure of angle, see right ascension.
The hour (symbol: h) is a unit of time. It is not an SI unit but is accepted for use with the SI.
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In modern usage, an hour is a unit of time 60 minutes, or 3,600 seconds in length. It is approximately 1/24 of a median Earth day.
Middle English ure first appears in the 13th century, as a loanword from Old French ure, ore, form Latin hora, ultimately from Greek ὥρα "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 *stundō "time, interval, while").
Greek ὥρα is cognate to English year, both from a PIE *i̯ēro- "year, summer".
The hour was originally defined in ancient civilizations (including those of Egypt, Sumer, India, and China) as either one twelfth of the time between sunrise and sunset or one twenty-fourth of a full day. 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, and also to the fact that humans have 12 finger bones (phalanges) on one hand (3 on each of 4 fingers). (It is possible to count to 12 with your thumb touching each finger bone in turn.) There is also a widespread tendency to make analogies among sets of data (12 months, 12 zodiacal signs, 12 hours, a dozen).
The Ancient Egyptian civilization is usually credited with establishing the division of the night into 12 parts, although there were many variations over the centuries. 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 10 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:
There are different ways of counting the hours:
The talmudic hour is the division of time elapsed from sunrise to sunset by 12, therfore being longer at summer than in winter.
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.
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Look up hour in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
| Major concepts | Time · Eternity · Arguments for eternity · Immortality Deep time · History · Past · Present · Future · Futurology | |
|---|---|---|
| Measurement and Standards | Chronometry · UTC · UT · TAI · Second · Minute · Hour · Sidereal time · Solar time · Time zone Clock · Horology · History of timekeeping devices · Astrarium · Marine chronometer · Sundial · Water clock Calendar · Day · Week · Month · Year · Tropical year · Julian · Gregorian · Islamic | |
| Chronology | Astronomical chronology · Geologic Time · Geological history · Geochronology · Archaeological dating Calendar era · Regnal year · Chronicle · Timeline · Periodization | |
| Religion and Mythology | Time and fate deities · Wheel of time · Kāla · Kalachakra · Prophecy · Dreamtime | |
| Philosophy | Causality · Eternalism · Eternal return · Event · The Unreality of Time · A-series and B-series · B-Theory of time Endurantism · Four dimensionalism · Perdurantism · Presentism · Temporal finitism · Temporal parts | |
| Physical Sciences | Time in physics · Spacetime · Absolute time and space · T-symmetry Arrow of time · Chronon · Fourth dimension · Planck epoch · Planck time · Time domain | |
| Psychology | Consciousness and spacetime · Mental chronometry · Reaction time · Sense of time · Specious present | |
| Sociology and Anthropology | Futures studies · Long Now Foundation · Time discipline | |
| Economics | Newtonian time in economics · Time value of money | |
| Related topics | Space · Duration · Time capsule · Time travel · Time signature · Carpe diem · Tempus fugit | |
| Time measurement and standards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Major subjects | Time · Chronometry · Orders of magnitude · Units of time · Metrology | |
| International standards | UTC · UT · TAI · ISO 31-1 · Second · DUT1 · Leap second · IERS Terrestrial Time · Geocentric Coordinate Time · Barycentric Coordinate Time Civil time · Minute · Hour · 12-hour clock · 24-hour clock · ISO week date | |
| Obsolete standards | Ephemeris time · Barycentric Dynamical Time · Greenwich Mean Time · Prime Meridian | |
| Time in physics | Spacetime · Chronon · Cosmological decade · Planck epoch · Planck time · T-symmetry Theory of relativity · Time dilation · Gravitational time dilation · Coordinate time · Proper time | |
| Horology | Clock · Astrarium · Atomic clock · Hourglass · Marine chronometer · Sundial · Water clock History of timekeeping devices · Equation of time · Complication | |
| Calendar | Day · Week · Month · Year · Decade · Century · Millennium Astronomical · Julian · Gregorian · Islamic · Lunisolar · Solar · Lunar · Epact · Intercalation · Leap year | |
| Archaeology & geology | International Commission on Stratigraphy · Geologic Time · Archaeological dating | |
| Astronomical chronology | Nuclear time scale · Precession · Sidereal time · Galactic year | |
| Unusual units | FFF System · Fortnight · Jiffy · Lustrum · Saeculum · Shake · Tide | |
| Related topics | Chronology · Duration · Mental chronometry · Time value of money | |
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