Global timekeeping is like having one big clock that everyone on Earth can agree on, even if they're far apart.
Imagine you and your friend are playing a game where you both count to 10, but you’re in different parts of the world. If you don’t have a way to know when you’re both saying “one,” or “ten,” it’s hard to play together. That's what time zones do, they help people know what time it is in their part of the world.
How the Big Clock Works
There are 24 time zones, like slices of a big pie. Each slice is one hour apart from its neighbor. When it’s noon in your town, it might be midnight in another part of the world, just like how it's light out for you but dark for someone else on the other side of the Earth.
The Prime Meridian is like the starting line for this big clock. It goes through a place called Greenwich, and that’s where we count time from. When it’s 12:00 there, that becomes Coordinated Universal Time, or UTC, the main reference point for all other time zones.
So, whether you're playing games or watching videos with friends around the world, everyone uses this big clock to stay in sync!
Examples
- An atomic clock ticks millions of times per second to keep precise time.
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See also
- How Does China's atomic clock: The most accurate clock in the world Work?
- How Does BBC News - A brief history of time zones Work?
- How Does I Found the Dumbest Time Zone Work?
- How Does These Are the World's Strangest Time Zones Work?
- How Does The world's silliest time zones Work?