Childrens Illustrated Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

126


Clocks and watches

HAVE YOU EVER COUNTED how many times you
look at a clock in one day? Time rules everyday life.
To catch a bus, get to school, or meet a friend, you
need to be on time. Clocks and watches make this
possible. Clocks are timekeeping devices too large to
be carried; watches are portable. Some tell the time
with hands moving around a dial; others with numbers.
All clocks and watches use a controlling device, such as
a pendulum, that steadily keeps the time.
Early people relied on the passing of days, nights,
and seasons to indicate time. Later, they used other
methods, such as sundials,
water clocks, and candles
with marks on them.
Mechanical timepieces were developed
between the 15th and 17th centuries with the
invention of clockwork and the pendulum.
Springs or falling weights moved gearwheels
to drive the clocks. These clocks had hands
and a dial and could be made small enough to
allow the invention of the watch. Today, many
clocks and watches are electronic and rely on
the regular vibrations of a quartz crystal to
keep time accurately.

SUNDIAL
The sun’s shadow moves slowly
around a dial marked off in
hours. As the shadow moves, it
indicates the time. The sundial,
which was invented about 5,000
years ago in Egypt,
was one of the
earliest methods
of measuring time.


ATOMIC CLOCK
If it were to run for more than
one million years, this atomic
clock would be less than one
second off! The atomic
clock is the most accurate
of all clocks. It is controlled
by vibrating atoms and is
used in science to measure
intervals of time with
extraordinary accuracy.

DIGITAL WATCH
A battery powers a digital watch, and a
tiny quartz crystal regulates its speed.
Electricity from the battery makes the
crystal vibrate thousands of times each
second. The microchip uses these
regular vibrations to make the numbers
on the display change every second, so
the watch shows the time very precisely.

WATER CLOCK
Water flows in and out
of bowls so that changing levels
of water, or a moving float,
indicate the passing time.
This Chinese water clock dates
back to the 14th century.

PENDULUM CLOCK
In the 1580s, the Italian scientist Galileo noticed
that each swing of a suspended weight, or
pendulum, takes a fixed time. He suggested that
this regular movement could be used to control
a clock. But it was another 70 years before the
first pendulum
clock was built.

Weight pulls cord,
driving main
wheel that turns
other wheels.

This
19th-century
fob watch
was worn
on the
end of a
small chain.

Main wheel

Escape
wheel moves with
each swing of the
pendulum and turns
the second hand.
Other wheels (not
shown) turn hour
and minute hands.

Swinging
pendulum
rocks anchor.

Find out more
Electronics
Rocks and minerals
Time

ASTRONOMICAL CLOCK
This beautiful clock in Prague,
the Czech Republic, not only
shows the hours and minutes
but also the signs of the zodiac
and the phases of the moon.

Anchor

Ends of anchor engage
teeth of escape wheel.

MECHANICAL WATCHES
Mechanical watches are controlled
by the oscillations of a wheel linked
to a spring. The first watch
was invented in
Germany in
about 1500.


LCD (liquid
crystal display)

Watch unit
and strap
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