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do we loose it or does it get evenly spread out into the year, thats why we have leap years?

2007-01-07 00:27:12 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Weather

6 answers

Nothing really happens to it. We just define a new hour in witch we will start and stop our day. It gives us more daylight time to stay at work and less at home si that we can conserve energy. If you would normally get home from work at 5 pm, it gets dark at 8 pm so you turn on the lights in the house and go to bed at 10, then you've used 2 hours of energy. If they move the clocks forward 1 hour, it gets dark at 9 so you only use 1 hour of energy. Multiply that by everyone in the united states and it adds up to a lot of energy.

Make a note that this year they will be changing the date in which these times roll forward and back. It's 3 weeks earlier and 3 weeks later than ever before. This is going to mess up everything that changes automaticly like your computer. The whole industry is trying to fix this problem as we talk but what are you going to do????

2007-01-07 00:38:14 · answer #1 · answered by mmoorenatas 2 · 0 0

No it quite is not the explanation why we've bounce year. Overhere the bars close at 3 AM and the clock substitute happens at 2 AM. That night of spring while that's 2 AM it is going to become a million AM so alcoholics have one hour greater to drink. the different in autumn, one hour much less to drink. sunlight hours saving time began for the time of international conflict a million (1914-1918) as a level to maintain skill interior the industries.

2016-12-12 06:01:30 · answer #2 · answered by fechter 4 · 0 0

The hours are stored along with radiaoctive wastes in the somewhat more passive wastes of Utah, New Mexico, and Nevada. Special concrete forms are poured around them lest the hours break out and contaminate every person for a hundred miles around with a terminal of "manyana". If that ever happened, we'd be just like Mexico, and nobody wants *that*, especially the Mexicans.

2007-01-07 00:39:22 · answer #3 · answered by Irritable 3 · 0 1

You loose it at fall, but you get it back again in the spring when the cloccks go forward ... or is it the otherway round?

2007-01-07 00:30:02 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"Time" actually doesn't change... we just adjust our schedules an hour back in the fall (which is the standard time) and spring forward an hour in the spring (daylight saving's time).

2007-01-07 00:37:19 · answer #5 · answered by Tara 4 · 0 0

Aba the scot said it so any person can understand.

2007-01-07 00:51:21 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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