at the gates of the
Royal Observatory, Greenwich is permanently kept on Greenwich Mean Time. As the
United Kingdom developed into an advanced
maritime nation, British mariners kept at least one
chronometer on GMT to calculate their
longitude from the Greenwich meridian, which was considered to have longitude zero degrees, by a convention adopted in the
International Meridian Conference of 1884. Synchronisation of the chronometer on GMT did not affect shipboard time, which was still solar time. But this practice, combined with mariners from other nations drawing from
Nevil Maskelyne's method of
lunar distances based on observations at Greenwich, led to GMT being used worldwide as a standard time independent of location. Most
time zones were based upon GMT, as an offset of a number of hours (and occasionally half or quarter hours) "ahead of GMT" or "behind GMT". Greenwich Mean Time was adopted across the island of
Great Britain by the
Railway Clearing House in 1847 and by almost all railway companies by the following year, from which the term
railway time is derived. It was gradually adopted for other purposes, but a legal case in 1858 held "
local mean time" to be the official time. On 14 May 1880, a letter signed by "Clerk to Justices" appeared in
The Times, stating that "Greenwich time is now kept almost throughout England, but it appears that Greenwich time is not legal time. For example, our polling booths were opened, say, at 8 13 and closed at 4 13 p.m." This was changed later in 1880, when Greenwich Mean Time was legally adopted throughout the island of Great Britain. GMT was adopted in the
Isle of Man in 1883, in
Jersey in 1898 and in
Guernsey in 1913.
Ireland adopted GMT in 1916, supplanting
Dublin Mean Time. Hourly
time signals from Greenwich Observatory were first broadcast by
shortwave radio on 5 February 1924 at 17:30:00 UTC, providing a rival accurate time-source to the
time ball at the Greenwich Observatory. The daily rotation of the Earth is irregular (see
ΔT) and has a slowing trend; therefore
atomic clocks constitute a much more stable timebase. On 1 January 1972, GMT as the international civil time standard was superseded by
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), maintained by an ensemble of atomic clocks around the world.
Universal Time (UT), a term introduced in 1928, initially represented mean time at Greenwich determined in the traditional way to accord with the originally defined
universal day; from 1 January 1956 (as decided by the
International Astronomical Union in
Dublin in 1955, at the initiative of
William Markowitz) this "raw" form of UT was re-labelled
UT0 and effectively superseded by refined forms UT1 (UT0 equalised for the effects of
polar wandering) and UT2 (UT1 further equalised for annual seasonal variations in Earth rotation rate). == Ambiguity in the definition of GMT ==