Martian calendar and timekeeping |
Martian calendar and timekeeping |
Sep 18 2012, 02:57 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 5-September 12 Member No.: 6636 |
Hello, all...
As a space enthusiast (especially Mars) and as a Ruby programmer, I have taken an interest in Martian calendars and clocks. Here (attached) is an article I wrote (basically for a non-technical audience) on "my" Martian calendar, the Martian Common Era calendar. I am perhaps 95% finished with a Ruby library called MarsDate that will handle Martian dates and times (and interconvert with Earthly dates/times). Comments are welcome on this article. And if anyone out there is a Ruby programmer, or even a programmer in general, I'd love to have some opinions or even assistance on this library. Thanks! Hal Fulton
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Sep 18 2012, 03:45 PM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 154 Joined: 21-April 05 From: Rochester, New York, USA Member No.: 336 |
Fun read! Thanks for posting.
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Sep 18 2012, 05:37 PM
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#3
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Solar System Cartographer Group: Members Posts: 10151 Joined: 5-April 05 From: Canada Member No.: 227 |
Stretched seconds? Would velocities be given as meters/stretched second?
There are , as you say, lots of ideas about Mars calendars, and I welcome all ideas like this as the discussions can be interesting and imaginative. But there is a Mars calendar in widespread use in scientific circles, originated by Clancy, which will be hard to replace at this stage. In fact I use it explicitly throughout my Mars book (due out at the end of this month). In my view, changing the values of important constants like the second is a fatal flaw which would never fly in serious applications - that works well as a thought exercise but not in practice. Phil -------------------- ... because the Solar System ain't gonna map itself.
Also to be found posting similar content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke Maps for download (free PD: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...Cartography.pdf NOTE: everything created by me which I post on UMSF is considered to be in the public domain (NOT CC, public domain) |
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Sep 18 2012, 05:54 PM
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#4
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 5-September 12 Member No.: 6636 |
Stretched seconds would never be used for scientific measurement, of course.
I use them only because NASA does, in its official timekeeping. Tell me more about this Clancy calendar. I thought the Darian was by far the most famous and widespread. Hal |
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Sep 18 2012, 09:33 PM
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#5
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 3516 Joined: 4-November 05 From: North Wales Member No.: 542 |
Link to earlier thread here: http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=7312
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Sep 18 2012, 11:27 PM
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#6
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Martian Photographer Group: Members Posts: 352 Joined: 3-March 05 Member No.: 183 |
So far, I have found most Martian calendar talk amusing. The Clancy calendar is practical--it doesn't need things like months, and doesn't add them. It is good at what it does, and therefore is used by those who professionally need reference to a Martian calendar. When people go adding weeks and months, I haven't seen someone try and think like someone who must use such a calendar. Picking 12 or 24 (or other) months for your calendar, based on personal preference, seems arbitrary.
Live on Mars. Or at least Mars time. Or live Earth time and operate something on Mars. The 3 most important cycles in Mars operations are 24 hours and 39 minutes, 36 sols, and 668 and change sols. In roughly that order, for operations. The 3 cycles will be the same for people on Mars working with people on Earth as it is for robots on Mars working with people on Earth. As long as there is something on Mars that is tied to local solar time there, and is also tied to some local time on Earth, a month-like time-frame is 36 sols. The number of such months in a year is not an integer. Oh well. 36 sols is 37 days--moons that have no tidal or agricultural significance will not change that, nor will preferences for round numbers. And it will be a while before desire to express Martian birthdays drives any big change in this. People who have that problem won't care what arbitrary cycles we impose; maybe they'll go with 18 months/year and let the astronomical vs. calendar cycles drift (as some familiar Earth calendars have done with lunar cycles vs. months). But if you do not recognize key cycles, you cannot make a useful calendar. |
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Sep 19 2012, 04:08 AM
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#7
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 5-September 12 Member No.: 6636 |
Oh, so the Clancy calendar is just the solar longitude?
Practical, but (to me) boring. We could do the same on Earth, of course, or could similarly use Earth's L-sub-s or even the so-called Julian day. But do you really want to remember your birthday as 117, celebrate 165 rather than July 4, and so on? Maybe we should number our children instead of giving them names... All kidding aside, the Clancy calendar is obviously adequate, well-known, and useful. Anything else is is purely for human interest, for imagination, and for fun. I have no idea what long-term solution will be used when humans live on Mars. I don't doubt that Ls will be used at the start. But I hope that eventually something more interesting and more imaginative will arise. Hal |
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Sep 19 2012, 12:33 PM
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#8
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Martian Photographer Group: Members Posts: 352 Joined: 3-March 05 Member No.: 183 |
Anything else is is purely for human interest, for imagination, and for fun. And art. Something is either practical, artful, or amusing. (For generality, one could add some negative terms, but they are unnecessary here.) A sculptor who works with the grain to make the raw material more than it ever was--that one is an artist. One who imposes will on a subject without regard to the subject's tendencies--not so much. A Martian calendar with more detail than Clancy's seems not practical now, which is not necessarily bad. A calendar that ignores the natural cycles, the likes of which have always defined what it means to be a calendar, is inartful. I would think one would strive for practical, artful, or both, even in fun--elsewise there is little point. An artful calendar-maker does not make up cycles: find cycles, and make them into something more than they were. Or be content with an adjective other than practical or artful. |
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Sep 19 2012, 05:16 PM
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#9
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 50 Joined: 16-January 06 Member No.: 646 |
Oh, so the Clancy calendar is just the solar longitude? If you mean by solar longitude that which is called L_S (or planetocentric longitude of the sun as seen from a specific body), then not exactly...but close. It is defined by orbital position and given Mars' non-trivially non-circular orbit, L_S is (slightly) non-linear in time. In other words, if you calculate the fractional part of Mars Year by L_S/360., this will not be exactly correct. |
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Sep 19 2012, 06:20 PM
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#10
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 5-September 12 Member No.: 6636 |
@mwolff, thanks for the clarification.
@Deimos - it's true I divided the Martian year into months and weeks as well as sols. I find this to be aesthetically pleasing for historical and cultural reasons. They are certainly unnecessary, and it's reasonable to argue they are inappropriate. But I like them. However, I did adhere strictly as I knew how to the year and sol cycles. Is there some other cycle I should be thinking of? The orbital periods of Phobos and Deimos, I think we agree, are of minimal value in a calendar context. Hal |
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Sep 19 2012, 06:56 PM
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#11
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Solar System Cartographer Group: Members Posts: 10151 Joined: 5-April 05 From: Canada Member No.: 227 |
That's a problem with Mars - there are really no other cycles to build into the calendar. I would say that means the field is wide open for suggestions, rather than closed. But it also means people may not take those suggestions very seriously.
As an aside, the first thing any Mars calendar needs to become widely used is a website with a calendar converter. This is the one I use all the time, based on Clancy's calendar: http://www-mars.lmd.jussieu.fr/mars/time/martian_time.html With that, people can figure out what sol it is on any given day, past or future. Note that this link DOES include a month designation, but I have never seen anyone use it, and I certainly don't myself. Phil -------------------- ... because the Solar System ain't gonna map itself.
Also to be found posting similar content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke Maps for download (free PD: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...Cartography.pdf NOTE: everything created by me which I post on UMSF is considered to be in the public domain (NOT CC, public domain) |
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Sep 19 2012, 11:27 PM
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#12
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 5-September 12 Member No.: 6636 |
I don't expect or want to be taken *too* seriously.
I certainly don't expect my calendar to be used by future Martian settlers -- though I wouldn't object, of course. I would *like* to think that whatever calendar those hypothetical settlers use is not just hyper-pragmatic, but will have a very human flavor, with its own culture and tradition. I want to see Martian holidays, if I should live so long, and I don't want them to be called things like 294 and 356. But all that is far beyond my control. What *is* within my control is: Is my math correct? Does my code work? And, as I said before, I think my code is "95% correct, with some glitches." The point about a web site is well-taken, and I shall certainly create one when my algorithm is a little more mature. So again -- anyone who wants to look at this is welcome to contact me offline (or in this forum). My email is rubyhacker@gmail.com If you can read Javascript, you can read Ruby (it's rather like Python or cleaned-up Perl). And anyhow, I can outline the basics of the algorithm in pseudocode or whatever. Cheers, Hal |
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Sep 25 2012, 11:49 AM
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#13
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1465 Joined: 9-February 04 From: Columbus OH USA Member No.: 13 |
I recall a guy very actively discussing Mars calendars online around the time of Pathfinder. Just looked it up--his name is Thomas Gangale & he made a virtual encyclopedia of Mars calendar systems:
http://pweb.jps.net/~gangale4/chronium/chronfrm.htm Lots of variations there as mental exercises, but calendars people actually use stem from mostly practical considerations and aren't necessarily based on abstract first principles like astronomical cycles. From a human perspective the solar day and the solar year seem indispensible, but what else? It could get esoteric. For example, with the current technology for getting stuff to Mars, the Earth-Mars opposition cycle of 780 days would be extremely important to any Mars residents--i.e., the Wells Fargo wagon would come every 780 days (760 sols). So, for each Mars year of 669 sols, that date would slip by 91 sols. -------------------- |
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