D
dryson
Guest
We all know that Tidally Locked Planets or TLP's are planets that do not revolve or spin on their own axis and are locked in place by their sun so that only one side constantly faces the sun.
How would time be measured on such a planet?
We know that on Earth a day is approximately 24 hours from starting point A of where the Sun creates a shadow from the limb of a tree to the same point B where the shadow is created again which creates a day of measureable time. We also know that it takes Earth 365 days except on Leap Year to orbit the Sun which creates the Earthen Calendar.
Would time on a tidally locked planet be similar to being in a infinite time zone where there would not be any days but would be only years.
If the planet wobbled a little bit on it's axis would that constitute a unit of time? Would a person standing at the point where the planet created a unit of day actually be able to experience a time shift in so much coming from a perspective point of view that they could straddle the wobble point and be in the future and past at the same time while the planet wobbled back and forth over so slightly?
Would a tidally locked planet have to use the a coordinate system to keep track of the days travelled around the sun by using place marks on the sun that when the planet passed by the point on the sun that correlated with a location on the planet could that be constituted as being able to mark the passage of a day?
How would time be measured on such a planet?
We know that on Earth a day is approximately 24 hours from starting point A of where the Sun creates a shadow from the limb of a tree to the same point B where the shadow is created again which creates a day of measureable time. We also know that it takes Earth 365 days except on Leap Year to orbit the Sun which creates the Earthen Calendar.
Would time on a tidally locked planet be similar to being in a infinite time zone where there would not be any days but would be only years.
If the planet wobbled a little bit on it's axis would that constitute a unit of time? Would a person standing at the point where the planet created a unit of day actually be able to experience a time shift in so much coming from a perspective point of view that they could straddle the wobble point and be in the future and past at the same time while the planet wobbled back and forth over so slightly?
Would a tidally locked planet have to use the a coordinate system to keep track of the days travelled around the sun by using place marks on the sun that when the planet passed by the point on the sun that correlated with a location on the planet could that be constituted as being able to mark the passage of a day?