"Greenwich Mean Time" (GMT) is a term originally referring to mean solar time at the Royal Greenwich Observatory in Greenwich in London. It is now often used to refer to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) when this is viewed as a time zone, although strictly UTC is an atomic time scale which only approximates GMT in the old sense. It is also used to refer to Universal Time (UT), which is the astronomical concept that directly replaced the original GMT.
Noon Greenwich Mean Time is not necessarily the moment when the Sun crosses the Greenwich meridian (and reaches its highest point in the sky in Greenwich) because of Earth's uneven speed in its elliptic orbit and its axial tilt. This event may be up to 16 minutes away from noon GMT (this discrepancy is known as the equation of time). The fictitious mean sun is the annual average of this nonuniform motion of the true Sun, necessitating the inclusion of mean in Greenwich Mean Time.
Historically the term "GMT" has been used with two different conventions for numbering hours. The old astronomical convention was to refer to noon as zero hours, whereas the civil and more modern convention is to refer to midnight as zero hours. The more specific terms "UT" and "UTC" do not suffer this ambiguity, always referring to midnight as zero hours.
History
As the United Kingdom grew into an advanced maritime nation, British mariners kept their timepieces on GMT in order to calculate their longitude "from the Greenwich meridian", which was by convention considered to have longitude zero degrees. This did not affect shipboard time itself, which was still solar time. This combined with mariners from other nations drawing from Nevil Maskelyne's method of lunar distances based on observations at Greenwich, eventually led to GMT being used world-wide as a reference time independent of location. Most time zones were based upon this reference as a number of hours and half-hours "ahead of GMT" or "behind GMT".
Greenwich Mean Time was adopted across Great Britain by the Railway Clearing House in 1847, and by almost all railway companies by the following year. It was gradually adopted for other purposes, but a legal case in 1858 held "Local Mean Time" to be the official time.[1] This changed in 1880, when GMT was legally adopted throughout Great Britain. GMT was adopted on the Isle of Man in 1883, Jersey in 1898 and Guernsey in 1913. Ireland adopted Greenwich Mean Time in 1916, supplanting Dublin Mean Time.[2]
Hourly time signals from Greenwich Observatory were first broadcast on 5 February 1924.
The daily rotation of the Earth is somewhat irregular (see ΔT) and is slowing down slightly. Atomic clocks represent a much more stable timebase. On 1 January 1972, GMT was replaced as the international time reference by Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), maintained by an ensemble of atomic clocks around the world. UT1 was introduced to represent "earth rotation time". Leap seconds are added to or subtracted from UTC to keep it within 0.9 seconds of UT1.
The international prime meridian is no longer precisely the Greenwich meridian, but remains close to it.
Time zone
Although civil time, e.g., the Greenwich Time Signal in the United Kingdom, is now based on UTC, it is still popularly called GMT. It is also called Western European Time (WET).
Those countries marked in dark blue on the map above use European Summer Time and advance their clock one hour in summer. In the United Kingdom, this is known as British Summer Time (BST); in the Republic of Ireland it is called Irish Summer Time (IST). Those countries marked in light blue keep their clocks on UTC/GMT/WET year round.
2006-09-30 20:11:19
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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GMT was established to aid worldwide oceanic navigation and is based on the rotation of the Earth. It was not until the British railway system started using GMT in the mid 1800s that GMT was adopted "for land use". And it was not until the late 1800s that GMT was adopted universally. At this time, the 24 time zones were created along with the International Date Line.
2006-09-30 22:43:07
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answer #2
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answered by ? 5
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GMT stands for Greenwich Mean Time (Greenwich is in London). Time zones are the 24 different parts of the globe that have a different hour, either ahead of or behind GMT. For example, Paris and Madrid are one hour ahead of GMT, and they are in the next time zone to us. America has many time zones, as San Francisco on the West Coast is about 3 hours behind Miami in Florida on the East Coast.
So GMT is the standard time zone that all the time in the world is set by, the other time zones are either a number of hours ahead or behind GMT.
2006-09-29 15:41:59
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answer #3
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answered by Shaun 1
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GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) is based in Greenwich, England and is the starting point for all time zones. For example 1:00 AM in Greenwich would be 2:00 AM in the next time zone to the East and so on all the way aroudn the world.
2006-09-29 15:41:53
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answer #4
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answered by seantherunner 3
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The equator is the latitude centre of earth, the same line in longtitude is called a time zone (international date line) which is where Greenwich Mean Time "GMT" comes into it, the meridiom line goes through London which has established it self as the perfect time keepers, but 180degreesfrom them thier is no countries for a start of day. gheck the 0's in longtitude and latitude and thats where the centre of earths surface is. From the south to the north, west to the east, all time zones.
2006-10-01 19:11:45
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answer #5
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answered by Mosez 4
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GMT refers to Greenwich Mean Time. This is the time zone defined by the prime meridian which runs through Greenwich England.
2006-09-29 15:42:21
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answer #6
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answered by stlouiscurt 6
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GMT means Greenwich Mean Time, and it is also called Zulu time.
It is either 5 or 6 hours ahead of Central Time Zone, depending upon summer or winter, savings time or regular.
Greenwich is in England.
2006-09-29 15:42:04
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answer #7
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answered by retiredslashescaped1 5
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