Jacques - Thanks very much for looking that up. Since I learned something
new, I'll feel that the day was worthwhile, despite having to spend the day
doing a lot of . . . well, you get the idea. Thanks.

Dennis Williams
DBA
Lifetouch, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2003 2:39 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


> -----Original Message-----
> DENNIS WILLIAMS
> 
> I think this is very perceptive - Julian vs. Boolean. I just 
> want to mention
> that what Oracle calls a Julian date is the number of days 
> since Jan 1, 4712
> BC. As far as I know, that is exclusive to Oracle. Other 
> systems define
> Julian differently.

I looked it up on Wikipedia and they say that Oracle's definition is the
usual definition. ?!? Which surprises me also.
If I had an Encyclopedia Britannica account then I could see what their
definition is.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_date

Julian day
(Redirected from Julian date) 


The term Julian day has different meanings. It is sometimes confused with
Julian date, which also has more than one meaning. Just as the Gregorian
date is a date in the Gregorian calendar, a Julian date is a date in the
Julian calendar. Some people use the term Julian date as synonymous with
Julian Day or Julian Day Number. Such use makes it ambigous, for which
reason is better to reserve the term Julian date to refer to a date in the
Julian calendar. 

The Julian Day (JD) or Julian Day Number is the time that has elapsed since
noon January 1, 4713 BC (according to the proleptic Julian calendar; or
November 24, 4714 BC according to the proleptic Gregorian calendar),
expressed in days and fractions of a day. 

The Julian day system was intended to provide a single system of dates that
could be used when working with different calendars and to unify different
historical chronologies. 

Given that the Julian Day Number (and modifications of it) has been widely
used by astronomers, it is also called "Astronomical Julian Day (AJD)". 

The most well known version of the Julian Day is perhaps the Chronological
Julian Day (CJD), a modification of the Astronomical Julian Day, in which
the starting point is set at midnight January 1, 4713 BC (Julian calendar)
rather than noon. Chronographers found the Julian Day concept useful, but
they didn't like noon as starting time. So CJD = AJD + 0.5. Note that AJD
uses Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), and so it is the same for all time
zones and is independent of Daylight-Saving Times (DST). On the other hand,
CJD is not, so it changes with different time zones and takes into account
the different local DSTs. 

Because the starting point is so long ago, numbers in the Julian day can be
quite large and cumbersome. To make numbers more convenient, a more recent
starting point is sometimes used, for instance by dropping the leading
digits. 

For example, the Lilian Day number (LD) counts from October 14, 1582 C.E. in
the Gregorian Calendar, which is the date before the day on which the
Gregorian calendar was adopted. Where CJD is the Chronological Julian day
number: 


 LD = CJD - 2,299,160 = AJD - 2,299,159.5
The Modified Julian Day, introduced by space scientists in the 1950s, is
defined in terms of the Julian Day as follows: 


 MJD = AJD - 2400000.5
The offset of 0.5 means that MJDs start midnight of November 17th, 1858 CE.
Modified Julian Days are always based on the Universal Time system, not
local time. 

The Truncated Julian Day (TJD) is obtained by subtracting 2,440,000.5 from
the AJD. 
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