Anders Celsius was the first to suggest that the __ was caused by magnetic fields. |  |
|
|
 | Numbers Don't Lie |
|
 | Degrees (in Celsius) that mark absolute zero, the lowest temperature theoretically possible | -273.15 |
|
|  | Executive order, signed by President George Bush in 1991, adopting the metric system for government use | 12770 |
|
|
|
 | Year Dutch German Polish physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit introduced the scale now named for him | 1724 |
|
|  | Only temperature at which both Celsius and Fahrenheit scales equal each other | -40 |
|
|
|
|
|
 | There was once such a thing as a decimal time. |
|
Today's second is derived from a sexagesimal system created by the ancient Babylonians, who defined the time unit as one-sixtieth of a minute. Fast-forward to the tail end of the 18th century, and the French Revolution was in a metric frenzy. In 1795, France adopted the gram for weight, the meter for distance, and centigrade (later renamed Celsius) for temperature. However, some of France's decimal ideas didn't quite stand the test of, er, time. By national decree in 1793, the French First Republic attempted to create a decimal system for time. This split the day into 10 hours, with each hour lasting 100 minutes, and each minute lasting 100 seconds (and so on). Because there are 86,400 normal seconds in a day, the decimal second was around 13% shorter. Although it was easy to convert among seconds, minutes, and hours, France's decimal time proved unpopular — after all, many people had perfectly good clocks with 24 hours on them — and the idea was abolished two years later. Since then, a couple of other temporal decimal proposals have been put forward, including watchmaker Swatch's attempt to redefine the day as 1,000 ".beats" (yes, the period was included) in 1998 in response to the internet's growing popularity. However, ancient Babylon's perception of time is likely too ingrained in human culture to change any time soon. | |
|
|
|
Thank you for supporting our advertisers. They help keep Interesting Facts free! |
|
|