Description

‘Entertaining and engrossing’ Sean Carroll

Press the snooze button on your alarm once too often and you soon remember the importance of good timekeeping. That need to tell the time connects you to over five thousand years of human history, from the first solstice markers at Newgrange to quartz crystal oscillating in your watch today. Science underpins time: measuring the movement of Sun, Earth and Moon, and unlocking the mysteries of quantum mechanics and relativity theory – the key to ultra-precise atomic clocks.

Yet time is also socially decided: the Gregorian calendar we use today came out of fraught politics, while the ancient Maya used sophisticated astronomical observations to produce a calendar system unlike any other. In his quirky and accessible style, Chad Orzel reveals the wondrous physics that makes time something we can set, measure and know.

A Brief History of Timekeeping: The Science of Marking Time, from Stonehenge to Atomic Clocks

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Paperback / softback by Chad Orzel

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Short Description:

‘Entertaining and engrossing’ Sean Carroll Press the snooze button on your alarm once too often and you soon remember the... Read more

    Publisher: Oneworld Publications
    Publication Date: 03/02/2022
    ISBN13: 9780861542154, 978-0861542154
    ISBN10: 0861542150

    Number of Pages: 336

    Non Fiction , Mathematics & Science , Education

    Description

    ‘Entertaining and engrossing’ Sean Carroll

    Press the snooze button on your alarm once too often and you soon remember the importance of good timekeeping. That need to tell the time connects you to over five thousand years of human history, from the first solstice markers at Newgrange to quartz crystal oscillating in your watch today. Science underpins time: measuring the movement of Sun, Earth and Moon, and unlocking the mysteries of quantum mechanics and relativity theory – the key to ultra-precise atomic clocks.

    Yet time is also socially decided: the Gregorian calendar we use today came out of fraught politics, while the ancient Maya used sophisticated astronomical observations to produce a calendar system unlike any other. In his quirky and accessible style, Chad Orzel reveals the wondrous physics that makes time something we can set, measure and know.

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