sundial

     

A sunial is a device that measures time by the position of the Sun. In common designs such as the horizontal sundial, the sun casts a shadow from its style (a thin rod or a sharp, straight edge) onto a flat surface marked with lines indicating the hours of the day. As the sun moves across the sky, the shadow-edge progressively aligns with different hour-lines on the plate. Such designs rely on the style being aligned with the axis of the Earth's rotation. Hence, if such a sundial is to tell the correct time, the style must point towards true North (not magnetic North) and the style's angle with horizontal must equal the sundial's geographical latitude. However, many sundials do not fit this description, and operate on different principles.

Trivia about sundial

  • This ancient time-measuring device must be designed for its specific location on Earth
  • This ancient timepiece was called a gnomon by the Greeks meaning "one who knows"
  • To set up one of these in the Northern Hemisphere, point the gnomon on its face to the North Pole
  • The Babylonians kept abreast of the times using a form of this instrument seen here:
  • This time-telling device consists of 2 parts, a gnomon & a plane