Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
"The first grand discovery was time, the landscape of experience." Daniel Boorstin
Rotate the sundial until it agrees with the time shown on your watch. Fasten the sundial in
place with a second screw. This watch shows eight in the morning, the sundial is set with
the edge of the shadow along the 8:00 AM line. Your sundial works best when set to
standard time, not daylight saving time. If your sundial is set to standard time you will have
to add one hour to the time during summer months.
Your sundial uses binary numbers, follow this link for an explanation of binary numbers.
Binary Numbers.
Decimal numbers
The sundial above is indicating 11:00 AM.
8:00 AM
8:30 AM
9:45 AM
12:00 noon
4:00 PM
6:00 PM
Binary Numbers
This project is suitable for high school or senior elementary classes, supporting both the astronomy part of a
science curriculum and aspects of the math curriculum - binary numbers and geometry.
The hila binary sundial uses binary numbers instead of the usual Roman numerals.
Computers use binary math, here is how it works.
Regular decimal numbers use 10 symbols, the common numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and
9.
Binary math uses only two symbols, 0 and 1.
We use coloured beads on our sundial. "0" is represented by white and "1" is represented by
a colour.
We are using "4 bit" binary numbers, represented by 4 beads. Each bead location has a
"value".
The bead on the extreme right has the value 1, the next bead's value is 2, then 4 and 8 at the
left end.
To determine the decimal value of a binary number add up the values of the coloured beads
(remember white is "0").
For instance 5 = 4 + 1.
Here is a table that shows some of the decimal values for a 4 bit number.
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