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Long-Term Timekeeping in the Clock of the Long Now

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Part of the book series: Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings ((ASSSP,volume 50))

Abstract

We construct our systems of time for many different purposes: to measure intervals and events, to predict the future and solidify the past, and to align our activities with the cycles of the seasons and days. For most purposes, we can ignore the differences between the kinds of time that we need for these different purposes, but over long intervals, we cannot. This article describes the nine kinds of time that are used in the construction of the Clock of the Long Now, a mechanical clock that is designed to keep time continuously for 10,000 years.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    That is, time responsive to the slowing Earth versus the steady cadence of the pendulum.

  2. 2.

    The precision of the clock is 5 min (in whatever time scale) allowing us a certain latitude of expression in this paper.

References

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  • D. Hillis, R. Seaman, S. Allen, J. Giorgini, in Time in the 10,000-Year Clock, ed. by J.H. Seago, R.L. Seaman, S.L. Allen, Decoupling Civil Timekeeping from Earth Rotation (American Astronautical Society, 2011)

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Correspondence to W. Daniel Hillis .

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Hillis, W.D. (2017). Long-Term Timekeeping in the Clock of the Long Now. In: Arias, E., Combrinck, L., Gabor, P., Hohenkerk, C., Seidelmann, P. (eds) The Science of Time 2016. Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings, vol 50. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-59909-0_37

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