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Julian Period
Astronomers use the Julian period because it is convenient
to express long time intervals in days rather than months,
weeks and years. It was devised by Joseph Scaliger, in
1582, who named it after his father Julius, thus creating
the confusion between the Julian (Caesar) calendar and the
Julian (Scaliger) period.
Julian Day 1 began at 12:00 noon, January 1, 4713 B.C. This
date was thought by some to correspond approximately to the
beginning of the universe. Certainly it predated any known
astronomical events known in the 16th century without
resorting to negative times. Scaliger decided on the actual
date on the grounds that it was the most recent coincidence
of three major chronological cycles:
- The 28-year solar cycle, after which dates in the Julian
calendar (for example September 27) return to the same
days of the week (for example Tuesday).
- The 19-year lunar cycle, after which phases of the moon
return to the same dates of the year.
- The 15-year indiction cycle, used in ancient Rome for tax
regulation.
It takes 7980 years to complete the cycle. Noon of January 1,
1988, marks the beginning of Julian Day 2447161.
The Julian period is also of interest because of its use as a
time base by the OpenVMS operating system.
Additional topics:
* OpenVMS and the Julian Period
* Tru64 UNIX Time Origin
* Brief History of the Gregorian Calendar
* History and DECwindows Calendar