Greenwich time and the longitude / Derek Howse.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Philip Wilson : 1997Distributor: Wappinger's Falls, NY, USA : Distributed in the USA and Canada by Antique Collectors' Club, 1997Description: 199 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 26 cmContent type:
  • still image
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0856674680
  • 9780856674686
  • 0948065265
  • 9780948065262
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Foreword / Martin Rees -- Ch. 1. Seeking the longitude: 300 BC-AD 1675 -- Ch. 2. Greenwich time for astronomers: 1675-1720 -- Ch. 3. Greenwich time for navigators: 1700-1840 -- Ch. 4. Greenwich time for Great Britain: 1825-1880 -- Ch. 5. A prime meridian: 1790-1884 -- Ch. 6. Greenwich time for the world: 1884-1939 -- Ch. 7. A clock more accurate than the Earth -- App. I. Finding the longitude -- App. II. Time-finding by astronomy -- App. III. The Greenwich Meridian in the Space Age / Carl Calvert.
Review: "This classic official history of Greenwich Time and the discovery of longitude - revised, updated and with new colour illustrations - has been republished in preparation for the Millennium. It tells the story of Greenwich Time from 1676, when it was first established for use at the newly created Royal Observatory at Greenwich, to the present day, when it has become the basis of timekeeping the world over." "It is also the story of the finding of longitude at sea, which was the specific problem that Charles II founded the Royal Observatory to solve, over 300 years ago. Greenwich became an international household name when, in 1884, its longitude - not that of Paris, Washington or the Great Pyramid - was chosen as the world's Prime Meridian of time and navigation, Longitude 0[degree]." "Derek Howse describes, in simple terms, the relevant developments in astronomy, navigation and timekeeping from the 1670s to the present day - with the atomic clock, Global Positioning System and leap second - and how Greenwich Time has been found, kept and distributed. Co-ordinated Universal Time (the time-scale which is the basis of all the world's time signals) is still firmly based on Greenwich Time and is never more than a second from it."--BOOK JACKET.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Jost Bürgi Library Reading Room QB223 .H76 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31560000038238

Originally published as: Greenwich time and the discovery of the longitude, 1980.

Includes bibliographical references (page 191) and index.

Foreword / Martin Rees -- Ch. 1. Seeking the longitude: 300 BC-AD 1675 -- Ch. 2. Greenwich time for astronomers: 1675-1720 -- Ch. 3. Greenwich time for navigators: 1700-1840 -- Ch. 4. Greenwich time for Great Britain: 1825-1880 -- Ch. 5. A prime meridian: 1790-1884 -- Ch. 6. Greenwich time for the world: 1884-1939 -- Ch. 7. A clock more accurate than the Earth -- App. I. Finding the longitude -- App. II. Time-finding by astronomy -- App. III. The Greenwich Meridian in the Space Age / Carl Calvert.

"This classic official history of Greenwich Time and the discovery of longitude - revised, updated and with new colour illustrations - has been republished in preparation for the Millennium. It tells the story of Greenwich Time from 1676, when it was first established for use at the newly created Royal Observatory at Greenwich, to the present day, when it has become the basis of timekeeping the world over." "It is also the story of the finding of longitude at sea, which was the specific problem that Charles II founded the Royal Observatory to solve, over 300 years ago. Greenwich became an international household name when, in 1884, its longitude - not that of Paris, Washington or the Great Pyramid - was chosen as the world's Prime Meridian of time and navigation, Longitude 0[degree]." "Derek Howse describes, in simple terms, the relevant developments in astronomy, navigation and timekeeping from the 1670s to the present day - with the atomic clock, Global Positioning System and leap second - and how Greenwich Time has been found, kept and distributed. Co-ordinated Universal Time (the time-scale which is the basis of all the world's time signals) is still firmly based on Greenwich Time and is never more than a second from it."--BOOK JACKET.

31560000038238 291

Significance and History of Greenwich Mean Time

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