60 sec. = 1 min., 60 min. = 1 hr., 24 hr. = 1 day. The 60's came from ancient Babylonian number system. Where did the 24 come from?
This assumes that the length of a second is fixed. If it were twice as long there would be only twelve hours in a day.Without supporting or refuting any of your assertions, it seems to me, that 24 is determined by all the other numbers. Otherwise, it wouldn't add up to a day, would it?
If you start with 60 seconds, and 60 minutes, you get a time unit of one hour. There happen to be 24 of those in a day.
This assumes that the length of a second is fixed. If it were twice as long there would be only twelve hours in a day.
60 sec. = 1 min., 60 min. = 1 hr., 24 hr. = 1 day. The 60's came from ancient Babylonian number system. Where did the 24 come from?
That's what I was going to say.It was 2 twelve hour parts to each day....
the number of hours per day was first set to be 24 .
Several replies seem to assume that the ancients set the definitions of second, minute, hour, based on the length of a second. I believe that the number of hours per day was first set to be 24 and the minutes and seconds were defined using 60.
Notice that a similar thing was done for circles. The degree was defined to be 1/360 part of a circle (360 day calendar ?) and minutes and seconds defined using 60.
That was the end result yet it began with the number 12.
Why 12 for the half day?That was the end result yet it began with the number 12.
Why 12 for the half day?
Unless we come up with something better:
dywyddyr's nick lomb link/quote seems likely for the egyptians' approximate 10-,1 and 1,-12 = 24 hour day and a night
Have you ever tried to tell time via a sun dial? The greeks, then seem to have pushed accuracy a tad farther.
the egyptians also had a 360 day year, followed by 5 or 6 god/feast days
tying in minutes and seconds probably followed development of modern chronometers
mathman, are you looking for absolutes where only approximations and guesses from archaeological evidence can be found?
I am trying to get some idea (archeological or other evidence) how the number 12 was decided upon as the number of divisions for a half day.....
I am trying to get some idea (archeological or other evidence) how the number 12 was decided upon as the number of divisions for a half day.
http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2011/11/15/3364432.htm as referenced Dywyddyr seems to be the answer.
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