The,Lost,Eleven,Days,Have,youe communication The Lost Eleven Days
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Have youever gone to bed one night and wondered just where the day went? Well could youimagine waking up to discover that eleven days had vanished completely? That isjust what happened in 1752 when the entire inhabitants of Britain and Americawent to bed on Wednesday 2 September, only to awake on Thursday 14 September. However, itwasnt an epidemic of sleepy sickness or even a mass dose of laziness that keptthe entire populace in bed but merely the authorities attempting to synchronisewith the rest of the world by adopting the Gregorian calendar. The Juliancalendar (named after Julius Caesar) had been in use since biblical times butwas finally phased out throughout Europe in the 1582 but it took the resoluteBrits and Americans another two hundred years to follow suit. And if thepainter Hogarth is to be believed the populace didnt take too kindly to iteither, with people taking to the street demanding the return of their missing11 days and even reports of rioting. Then whychange? That was what the British authorities had been saying for two hundredyears ever since Pope Gregory XIII had replaced the Julian calendar in Europetwo hundred years before. However,the reason for the original change was that the Julian calendar didnt allowfor enough leap years (they were omitted in years divisible by 100 but notdivisible by 400 what were the Romans thinking?) and the seasons were slowlybecoming out of sync with the calendar. The situation was now becoming evenmore intolerable in Britain, playing havoc for farmers - who had no idea whento plant their crops, finally the authorities were to switch over and fastforward the whole country 11 days. Howeverthis synchronisation problem has always been with us. We have traditionallytried to base our calendars around the movement of the Earth to allow us to predictseasons and know when the summer and winter will fall. However, we may havesorted out the leap years (caused by the fact the Earth takes 365 and a quarterdays to travel around the Sun) but trying to base a calendar around themovement of the Earth will always lead to problems. TheGregorian calendar worked fine until the 1950s when the atomic clock wasdeveloped. The atomic clock worked so well - providing timing informationaccurate to a second in several millions of years - that we soon realised thatour clocks were now far more accurate than the Earth itself. The Earthis actually slowing down in rotation and if nothing was done then eventuallynoon would fall at night and vice-versa (albeit not for several millennia) butdont worry you are not about to wake up in the middle of next week. Thesolution is the adding of leap seconds and 33 have been slotted into the end ofour years since the 1970s. Thedecision to insert a second is usually taken six months before after carefulmonitoring of the Earths rotation. A calendar based on the movement of the Earthmay seem less relevant today but with a Global Positioning System (GPS), aglobal time-scale (Coordinated Universal Time), and computers all syncedtogether around the world using NTP servers (Network Time Protocol) it isimperative we can all tell the right time.
The,Lost,Eleven,Days,Have,youe