DECIMAL TIME: DUCT
Posted: 31 Mar 2013, 16:29
Official announcement and Press release from The World Horological Commission
Metrication of Time
The World Horological Commission will introduce the new Universal standard measurement of time at the end of this year. This will be known as Decimal Universal Co-ordinated Time and by the acronym DUCT and replaces Co-ordinated Universal Time UTC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_time
The main changes are as follows:
The SI unit is day. Each day will be divided into 10 hours of 100 minutes. Hours will be known as decidays and minutes as millidays. Each milliday will be subdivided into 100 seconds. The second is not being renamed to avoid confusion. So there will be 100,000 seconds per day compared with 86,400 at the moment. The actual length of the day is derived from one rotation of the Earth and cannot be changed. By increasing the length of the second by the factor 1.000663562 to reflect the true value taken by the Earth’s solar orbit, leap years will be eliminated. The rotation of the Earth is slowing at the rate of 1.47 new ms per 100 years and at that rate it will be necessary to add a new second every 68000 years. One second (DUCT) = 0.8405574 seconds (UTC/SI).
The year will be divided into 10 months. These will be called Unember, Biember, Triember, Quadember, Pentember, Sexember, September, Octember, Nonember and December. There will be 36 days in months 1,3,5,7,9 and 37 days in months 2,4,6,8,10 to give the same total of 365 days per year. The number of days per year is fixed and determined by the period it takes the Earth to travel around the Sun. Both month and year are not SI units, just multiples of the day SI unit. The proposals were ratified by the WHC and will come into effect on 1 Unember 2014.
All international regulatory bodies, including SI, BIPM (http://www.bipm.org/en/home/) have been involved in this change and although other SI units will be unchanged, their values will change where those values are dependant on time. For example the speed of light will be expressed in kilometres per DUCT second and not the UTC second. The names of smaller divisions of the second will be unchanged: millisecond, microsecond, nanosecond, picosecond etc. but the value will be based on the new second (DUCT). This is the primary reason why the name second was retained by the DUCT system.
Decimal time is already widely used in scientific fields, for example:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorticity
What will this mean to the average person? It is only a matter of becoming accustomed to the new units and terms, for example a working day would be around 3 decidays long and not 8 hours as at present. It is expected that the population will become familiar with the changes within one year and no insurmountable problems are anticipated.
Calendars are being printed and will be issued before 2013/12/31.
7 billion watches are being produced and will be issued to every citizen by their respective Government. These watches are state of the art, sealed units and will never require adjustment. Travel between longitudinal time zones will be accommodated automatically. Clocks are being produced and will be offered in free exchange for your old timepiece at local recycling centres. All new clocks will conform to the DUCT standard and be in decimal units. Analogue timepieces will have a ten decidays display (face) and digital clocks will normally display up to 9.9999.
Existing appliances will continue to operate normally and no adjustment will be necessary.
Help lines, websites, and training programs for key people are being arranged.
http://www.ehow.co.uk/how_5557920_calcu ... clock.html
What you can do:
Be prepared. Learn the new terms. Take action as soon as possible.
There will be no am and pm as these terms are no longer necessary. The day starts at 0.0000 “zero hour” and ends at 9.99999999… “Ten”
There will be no weeks and consequently no days of the week. Days of the month are simply referred to as 01 to 36 or 37.
Learn the new names for the months; the last 4 are relatively easy:
Month 1 = UNEMBER 36 days
Month 2 = BIEMBER 37 days
Month 3 = TRIEMBER 36 days
Month 4 = QUADEMBER 37 days
Month 5 = PENTEMBER 36 days
Month 6 = SEXEMBER 37 days
Month 7 = SEPTEMBER 36 days
Month 8 = OCTEMBER 37 days
Month 9 = NONEMBER 36 days
Month 10 = DECEMBER 37 days
Throw out any year 2014 diaries, calendars, and other printed matter that are not in the DUCT format.
Find out from your local council before the end of the year where to exchange your clocks.
Your employer will assist as necessary.
Assist others during the transition.
G. M. Woclock
President WHC
Dated: 2013/04/01
Metrication of Time
The World Horological Commission will introduce the new Universal standard measurement of time at the end of this year. This will be known as Decimal Universal Co-ordinated Time and by the acronym DUCT and replaces Co-ordinated Universal Time UTC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_time
The main changes are as follows:
The SI unit is day. Each day will be divided into 10 hours of 100 minutes. Hours will be known as decidays and minutes as millidays. Each milliday will be subdivided into 100 seconds. The second is not being renamed to avoid confusion. So there will be 100,000 seconds per day compared with 86,400 at the moment. The actual length of the day is derived from one rotation of the Earth and cannot be changed. By increasing the length of the second by the factor 1.000663562 to reflect the true value taken by the Earth’s solar orbit, leap years will be eliminated. The rotation of the Earth is slowing at the rate of 1.47 new ms per 100 years and at that rate it will be necessary to add a new second every 68000 years. One second (DUCT) = 0.8405574 seconds (UTC/SI).
The year will be divided into 10 months. These will be called Unember, Biember, Triember, Quadember, Pentember, Sexember, September, Octember, Nonember and December. There will be 36 days in months 1,3,5,7,9 and 37 days in months 2,4,6,8,10 to give the same total of 365 days per year. The number of days per year is fixed and determined by the period it takes the Earth to travel around the Sun. Both month and year are not SI units, just multiples of the day SI unit. The proposals were ratified by the WHC and will come into effect on 1 Unember 2014.
All international regulatory bodies, including SI, BIPM (http://www.bipm.org/en/home/) have been involved in this change and although other SI units will be unchanged, their values will change where those values are dependant on time. For example the speed of light will be expressed in kilometres per DUCT second and not the UTC second. The names of smaller divisions of the second will be unchanged: millisecond, microsecond, nanosecond, picosecond etc. but the value will be based on the new second (DUCT). This is the primary reason why the name second was retained by the DUCT system.
Decimal time is already widely used in scientific fields, for example:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorticity
What will this mean to the average person? It is only a matter of becoming accustomed to the new units and terms, for example a working day would be around 3 decidays long and not 8 hours as at present. It is expected that the population will become familiar with the changes within one year and no insurmountable problems are anticipated.
Calendars are being printed and will be issued before 2013/12/31.
7 billion watches are being produced and will be issued to every citizen by their respective Government. These watches are state of the art, sealed units and will never require adjustment. Travel between longitudinal time zones will be accommodated automatically. Clocks are being produced and will be offered in free exchange for your old timepiece at local recycling centres. All new clocks will conform to the DUCT standard and be in decimal units. Analogue timepieces will have a ten decidays display (face) and digital clocks will normally display up to 9.9999.
Existing appliances will continue to operate normally and no adjustment will be necessary.
Help lines, websites, and training programs for key people are being arranged.
http://www.ehow.co.uk/how_5557920_calcu ... clock.html
What you can do:
Be prepared. Learn the new terms. Take action as soon as possible.
There will be no am and pm as these terms are no longer necessary. The day starts at 0.0000 “zero hour” and ends at 9.99999999… “Ten”
There will be no weeks and consequently no days of the week. Days of the month are simply referred to as 01 to 36 or 37.
Learn the new names for the months; the last 4 are relatively easy:
Month 1 = UNEMBER 36 days
Month 2 = BIEMBER 37 days
Month 3 = TRIEMBER 36 days
Month 4 = QUADEMBER 37 days
Month 5 = PENTEMBER 36 days
Month 6 = SEXEMBER 37 days
Month 7 = SEPTEMBER 36 days
Month 8 = OCTEMBER 37 days
Month 9 = NONEMBER 36 days
Month 10 = DECEMBER 37 days
Throw out any year 2014 diaries, calendars, and other printed matter that are not in the DUCT format.
Find out from your local council before the end of the year where to exchange your clocks.
Your employer will assist as necessary.
Assist others during the transition.
G. M. Woclock
President WHC
Dated: 2013/04/01