I wrote:
>> Perhaps it'd be worth documenting that you can get the standard
>> astronomical definition of Julian date by transposing to time zone UTC-12
>> before converting.

BTW ... I'd first thought that the way to do this was to rotate to
time zone UTC+12.  I convinced myself on two separate days that UTC-12
was correct instead, but now I'm thinking I was right the first time.
In particular, the results I'm getting with UTC-12 don't square with
the example on Wikipedia [1], which says "the Julian Date for
00:30:00.0 UT January 1, 2013, is 2 456 293.520 833":

regression=# select extract(julian from '2013-01-01 00:30+00'::timestamptz at 
time zone 'utc-12');
           extract            
------------------------------
 2456294.52083333333333333333
(1 row)

But using UTC+12 does match:

regression=# select extract(julian from '2013-01-01 00:30+00'::timestamptz at 
time zone 'utc+12');
           extract            
------------------------------
 2456293.52083333333333333333
(1 row)

Of course Wikipedia has been known to contain errors, but now
I'm inclined to think I blew this.  Anyone want to check my work?

                        regards, tom lane

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_day


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