I was having a discussion with a friend at work who talks watches, and we were discussing how you would tell time on Mars.
Unlike, say, the Moon, which has a day nowhere near the same length as Earth's (about 29 days), Mars has a day very close to the same length as Earth: 24h 39m 35.244s. (NASA scientists have taken to calling Martian days "sols", which, to my thinking, may add more confusion, depending.)
So, it's reasonable to assume that an explorer spending several months on Mars will adapt a sleep cycle based on this slightly longer day.
It's also reasonable to assume that our explorer is not going to adopt a new base unit of time, but will continue using the SI second to measure time.
So here's the problem: The SI second is reverse-engineered from the Solar Day, which, before the atomic clock, was the standard unit of time for centuries. We divided the day into 24 hours, each of 60 minutes, each of 60 seconds. Then, when we realized that the Earth's rotation is not constant, we redefined the second as "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium 133 atom".
Problem is, on Mars, the second does not divide evenly into a Martian solar day.
So I can build a watch that looks like an Earth watch, but runs slow enough so that a Martian noon will occur each sol at 12:00, but this means redefining hours, minutes, and seconds to Martian standards.
Or, I can stick with the SI second and live with a wierd ratio between seconds and Martian minutes or hours. But remember, the SI second does not divide evenly into a martian sol, so my watch may need often resetting and cannot be considered a precision clock.
What do you guys think? How would you measure time on Mars, while keeping up to speed with the SI system?
Unlike, say, the Moon, which has a day nowhere near the same length as Earth's (about 29 days), Mars has a day very close to the same length as Earth: 24h 39m 35.244s. (NASA scientists have taken to calling Martian days "sols", which, to my thinking, may add more confusion, depending.)
So, it's reasonable to assume that an explorer spending several months on Mars will adapt a sleep cycle based on this slightly longer day.
It's also reasonable to assume that our explorer is not going to adopt a new base unit of time, but will continue using the SI second to measure time.
So here's the problem: The SI second is reverse-engineered from the Solar Day, which, before the atomic clock, was the standard unit of time for centuries. We divided the day into 24 hours, each of 60 minutes, each of 60 seconds. Then, when we realized that the Earth's rotation is not constant, we redefined the second as "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium 133 atom".
Problem is, on Mars, the second does not divide evenly into a Martian solar day.
So I can build a watch that looks like an Earth watch, but runs slow enough so that a Martian noon will occur each sol at 12:00, but this means redefining hours, minutes, and seconds to Martian standards.
Or, I can stick with the SI second and live with a wierd ratio between seconds and Martian minutes or hours. But remember, the SI second does not divide evenly into a martian sol, so my watch may need often resetting and cannot be considered a precision clock.
What do you guys think? How would you measure time on Mars, while keeping up to speed with the SI system?