What is a Hour (h)?
Formal Definition
The hour (symbol: h) is a unit of time equal to exactly 3,600 seconds or 60 minutes. It is a non-SI unit accepted for use with the International System of Units. One day contains 24 hours. The hour is one of the oldest units of time still in daily use, with origins in ancient Egypt and Babylonia.
The 24-hour day represents a fundamental organizing principle of human civilization. Work schedules, transportation systems, broadcast programming, and biological rhythms all revolve around the hour. Unlike the second and minute, which are too short for planning, and the day, which is too long for detailed scheduling, the hour occupies a natural middle ground that aligns with human activity patterns.
Variable vs. Fixed Hours
For most of history, hours were "temporal" or "unequal" — daytime was divided into 12 hours and nighttime into 12 hours, regardless of season. This meant summer daylight hours were longer than winter daylight hours. Fixed equal-length hours became standard only with the spread of mechanical clocks in the 14th-15th centuries.
Etymology
Greek and Latin Roots
The English word "hour" comes from Anglo-Norman "houre," from Old French "ore/eure," from Latin "hora," which was borrowed from Greek "ὥρα" (hōra). The Greek word originally meant "season" or "time of year," and only later narrowed to mean a division of the day. The connection to seasons reflects the original variable-length hours that changed with the seasons.
Cultural Variations
In Russian, «час» (chas) comes from a Proto-Slavic root related to waiting or expecting. In German, "Stunde" derives from a word meaning "standing" or "a period of standing." These etymologies reveal different cultural perspectives on how the hour-long period was conceived.
History
Egyptian Origins
The ancient Egyptians are credited with dividing the day into 24 parts around 1500 BCE. They used sundials (shadow clocks) for daytime and star observations (decan charts) for nighttime. The choice of 12 hours for each may relate to the Egyptians' use of finger joints for counting (excluding the thumb, each hand has 12 phalanges).
Greek and Roman Development
Greek astronomers formalized the 24-hour day. Hipparchus (c. 150 BCE) proposed fixed-length equinoctial hours, but temporal hours remained standard for civil use. Roman life was organized around temporal hours: the workday ran from the first hour (hora prima, around 6 AM) to the twelfth.
Mechanical Clocks
The invention of the mechanical clock in medieval Europe (13th century) gradually standardized the hour. By the 15th century, public clocks in European cities struck equal hours, and the fixed 60-minute hour became universal. The switch from temporal to fixed hours was one of the most significant changes in how humans related to time.
Modern Standardization
The International Meridian Conference of 1884 established 24 standardized time zones, each nominally one hour wide. This system, combined with the telegraph, created the modern global timekeeping framework. Today, UTC maintains the hour as a fundamental division of the day.
Current Use
Work and Economy
Labor is measured and compensated by the hour in most economies. The standard workweek is 40 hours in many countries (8 hours × 5 days). Hourly wages, billable hours (for lawyers and consultants), and overtime rates all depend on the hour. The US federal minimum wage is defined per hour.
Transportation
Speed is expressed in kilometers per hour (km/h) or miles per hour (mph). Flight times are given in hours and minutes. Train schedules operate on hourly or sub-hourly intervals. Maritime speed is measured in knots (nautical miles per hour).
Health and Biology
The human circadian rhythm operates on approximately a 24-hour cycle, with specific hormones peaking at different hours. Sleep is measured in hours: adults need 7-9 hours. Medication dosing intervals are prescribed in hours. Hospital shift changes typically occur every 8 or 12 hours.
Everyday Use
Daily Routine
The hour structures daily life: wake at 7, work 9-17, gym for 1 hour, dinner at 19, sleep at 23. Time management advice is often framed in hourly blocks. The "rule of 10,000 hours" (Malcolm Gladwell) suggests expertise requires roughly 10,000 hours of practice.
Entertainment
Movies are typically 1.5-3 hours. TV episodes are 0.5-1 hour. Podcast episodes average 0.5-1.5 hours. Concert performances run 1-3 hours. Understanding duration in hours helps plan entertainment schedules.
Cooking
Long cooking processes are measured in hours: bread rises for 1-2 hours, slow-cooked meat requires 4-8 hours, fermented foods may take 12-48 hours. Oven timers are set in hours and minutes.
In Science & Industry
Astronomy
Hour angle is a key coordinate in astronomy, measuring the angular distance of a celestial object from the meridian. Right ascension is measured in hours (0-24h), with one hour of RA equaling 15° of arc. Sidereal time — time measured by the stars — uses a sidereal hour slightly shorter than a solar hour.
Earth Science
Weather data is recorded hourly. Tidal predictions use hours. Seismic networks report earthquake occurrence times in hours, minutes, and seconds UTC. River flow rates and air quality measurements are often averaged over hourly intervals.
Epidemiology
Disease incubation periods and treatment durations are measured in hours for acute conditions. Hospital length-of-stay statistics use hours. Emergency response times are tracked in minutes and hours.
Interesting Facts
The ancient Egyptian choice of 12 daytime and 12 nighttime hours may come from counting on finger joints: each hand has 12 phalanges (3 per finger, excluding the thumb), and 12 × 2 = 24.
Before mechanical clocks, a 'summer hour' in Northern Europe could be 75 minutes long while a 'winter hour' was only 45 minutes — the same 12-hour division applied to very different amounts of daylight.
The word 'clock' derives from the Medieval Latin 'clocca' (bell), because early clocks had no face — they simply struck the hours on a bell.
The 10,000-hour rule popularized by Malcolm Gladwell suggests that world-class expertise in any field requires approximately 10,000 hours of deliberate practice — about 3 hours per day for 10 years.
The International Space Station orbits Earth every 90 minutes, meaning astronauts experience 16 sunrises and sunsets per 24-hour period. They maintain a 24-hour schedule synced to UTC.
The famous clock at Big Ben (Elizabeth Tower) in London has kept time since 1859. Its pendulum swings every 2 seconds, accumulating 43,200 swings per 24 hours.