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Sundial
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==Functioning== [[File:London dial.svg|thumb|left|A [[London dial|London type horizontal dial]]. The western edge of the gnomon is used as the style before noon, the eastern edge after that time. The changeover causes a discontinuity, the noon gap, in the time scale.]] In general, sundials indicate the time by casting a shadow or throwing light onto a surface known as a ''dial face'' or ''dial plate''. Although usually a flat plane, the dial face may also be the inner or outer surface of a sphere, cylinder, cone, helix, and various other shapes. The time is indicated where a shadow or light falls on the dial face, which is usually inscribed with hour lines. Although usually straight, these hour lines may also be curved, depending on the design of the sundial (see below). In some designs, it is possible to determine the date of the year, or it may be required to know the date to find the correct time. In such cases, there may be multiple sets of hour lines for different months, or there may be mechanisms for setting/calculating the month. In addition to the hour lines, the dial face may offer other data—such as the horizon, the equator and the tropics—which are referred to collectively as the dial furniture. The entire object that casts a shadow or light onto the dial face is known as the sundial's ''gnomon''.<ref name="B.S.S."/> However, it is usually only an edge of the gnomon (or another linear feature) that casts the shadow used to determine the time; this linear feature is known as the sundial's ''style''. The style is usually aligned parallel to the axis of the celestial sphere, and therefore is aligned with the local geographical meridian. In some sundial designs, only a point-like feature, such as the tip of the style, is used to determine the time and date; this point-like feature is known as the sundial's ''nodus''.<ref name="B.S.S."> {{cite web | publisher = British Sundial Society | title = BSS Glossary | url = http://www.sundialsoc.org.uk/index.htm | access-date = 2011-05-02 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071010085501/http://www.sundialsoc.org.uk/glossary/alpha.htm#S | archive-date = 2007-10-10 }} </ref>{{efn| In some technical writing, the word "gnomon" can also mean the perpendicular height of a nodus from the dial plate. The point where the style intersects the dial plate is called the ''gnomon root''. }} Some sundials use both a style and a nodus to determine the time and date. The gnomon is usually fixed relative to the dial face, but not always; in some designs such as the analemmatic sundial, the style is moved according to the month. If the style is fixed, the line on the dial plate perpendicularly beneath the style is called the ''substyle'',<ref name="B.S.S."/> meaning "below the style". The angle the style makes with the plane of the dial plate is called the substyle height, an unusual use of the word ''height'' to mean an ''angle''. On many wall dials, the substyle is not the same as the noon line (see below). The angle on the dial plate between the noon line and the substyle is called the ''substyle distance'', an unusual use of the word ''distance'' to mean an ''angle''. By tradition, many sundials have a [[motto]]. The motto is usually in the form of an [[epigram]]: sometimes sombre reflections on the passing of time and the brevity of life, but equally often humorous witticisms of the dial maker. One such quip is, ''I am a sundial, and I make a botch, Of what is done much better by a watch.''<ref>{{harvp|Rohr|1996|pp=126–129}}; {{harvp|Waugh|1973| pp=124–125}}</ref> A dial is said to be ''equiangular'' if its hour-lines are straight and spaced equally. Most equiangular sundials have a fixed gnomon style aligned with the Earth's rotational axis, as well as a shadow-receiving surface that is symmetrical about that axis; examples include the equatorial dial, the equatorial bow, the armillary sphere, the cylindrical dial and the conical dial. However, other designs are equiangular, such as the Lambert dial, a version of the [[analemmatic sundial]] with a moveable style.
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