[LEAPSECS] Bulletin C and all that
Rob Seaman
seaman at noao.edu
Mon Jan 26 14:35:39 EST 2015
On Jan 26, 2015, at 12:21 PM, Warner Losh <imp at bsdimp.com> wrote:
> It all depends on the data that you are using whether the new day starts at midnight
> or noon. If you are talking to astronomers before the 20th century, chances are good
> it is noon.
Big fan of Patrick O'Brian. Frequent mention is made in his Nelson-era novels of their taking noon sightings of the Sun and declaring the start of a new day. I don't recall any discussion of mean versus apparent time, however, though the ships' chronometers are often referred to.
> Civil folks chances are it is midnight. This ambiguity is why insurance companies
> say that something runs from 12:01am or 11:59pm or some other time that’s unambiguous.
Of course ante and post meridiem also reference the Sun. Perhaps make that "currently unambiguous" ;-)
Rob
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