TOPIC 27 OF 46

Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks

🎓 Class 7 Science CBSE Theory Ch 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion ⏱ ~14 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This MCQ module is based on: Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks

[myaischool_lt_science_assessment grade_level="class_7" science_domain="physics" difficulty="basic"]

Prerna and the Olympic Sprint

On a warm August evening in Jaipur, Prerna sits glued to the television, watching the Olympic 100-metre final. In just under ten seconds, the race is over — and the commentator announces the winner's time to the hundredth of a second. "Dadi," she asks her grandmother, "how can they measure time so exactly? My wall clock only ticks in seconds." Dadi smiles and points to the row of time-keeping objects in the house: a talking watch for Prerna's uncle who cannot see, a Braille wrist-watch, a mobile phone, a pendulum wall clock, and an old stopwatch that used to belong to Prerna's grandfather, a school sports teacher.

Think first: Before clocks and watches were invented, how did people know when it was noon, when it was time to pray, or how long the rice had been cooking? What natural events repeated reliably enough to act as the first "clocks"?
Time-keepers in Prerna's home Wall clock 10:25 Mobile clock Braille watch 00:09 .58 Stopwatch Talking watch
Fig. 8.1: Different clocks serve different needs — yet all measure the same quantity: time.

8.1 A Short History of Time Measurement

Long before the invention of any mechanical device, our ancestors looked to periodic events in nature to mark the passage of time. Every periodic event — something that repeats at regular intervals — can serve as a clock.

Ancient Clocks: Sun, Water, Sand and Fire

  • Sundial (shadow clock): A vertical rod fixed on a flat plate casts a shadow whose direction changes as the Sun moves across the sky. Graduation marks on the plate tell the hour.
  • Water clock (clepsydra): Water drips steadily from one vessel into another; the depth of water in the lower vessel indicates how much time has passed.
  • Sand clock (hourglass): Fine sand falls from the upper bulb into the lower one through a narrow neck. When all the sand has fallen, a fixed duration — often one hour — is over.
  • Candle clock: A marked candle burns down steadily; the remaining length tells how much time has elapsed.
Sundial shadow of rod Water clock Sand clock Candle clock
Fig. 8.2: Four of the earliest time-keeping inventions — each relies on something that happens at a steady, predictable rate.

Mechanical and Modern Clocks

Around the 14th century, mechanical clocks with weights and gears began to appear in European towers. Later, pendulum clocks (perfected in the 17th century) brought far better accuracy. The invention of the coiled spring allowed small portable watches to be carried in pockets.

In the 20th century came quartz watches, which use the regular vibrations of a tiny quartz crystal driven by a battery. The most accurate time-keepers of all are atomic clocks, which count the vibrations of caesium atoms. An atomic clock is so reliable that it would lose only about one second in a hundred million years.

Sundial~1500 BCE Water clock~1400 BCE Sand clock~8th c. Mechanical14th c. Quartz1927 Atomic1955 Each new clock is more accurate than the one before
Fig. 8.3: A timeline showing how clocks have evolved — from shadows to singing atoms.

8.2 Units of Time

The SI unit of time is the second (s). From this one unit, we build up every larger and smaller unit we use.

Standard conversions:
\(1\,\text{minute} = 60\,\text{seconds}\)
\(1\,\text{hour} = 60\,\text{minutes} = 3600\,\text{seconds}\)
\(1\,\text{day} = 24\,\text{hours} = 86\,400\,\text{seconds}\)

Even larger units — the week (7 days), the month (about 30 days), and the year (about 365 days) — help us plan and remember events. For very short happenings we use smaller units: the millisecond (one-thousandth of a second), the microsecond (one-millionth) and the nanosecond (one-billionth).

UnitSymbolValue in secondsTypical use
Nanosecondns\(10^{-9}\)Signals inside a computer chip
Microsecondµs\(10^{-6}\)Camera flashes, lightning
Millisecondms\(10^{-3}\)Sprint timing, eye blink
Seconds1Heart beat, pendulum swing
Minutemin60Boiling an egg
Hourh3600A class period, a movie
Dayd86 400One rotation of the Earth
Yeary≈ 3.15 × 10⁷One revolution of the Earth around the Sun
Activity 8.1 — Everyday Time Intervals L2 Understand

Match each everyday event with a rough estimate of how long it takes. Use your wrist-watch or a stopwatch on a mobile phone to check a few of them.

  • A single heartbeat
  • One eye blink
  • Walking from the gate to the classroom
  • Boiling a cup of milk
  • A school lunch break
Predict: Which of these is closest to one second? Which is closer to half a minute? Which is closer to half an hour?
Heartbeat ≈ 1 s, eye blink ≈ 0.3 s, walk to classroom ≈ 5–20 s (a few seconds), boiling milk ≈ 3–5 minutes, lunch break ≈ 20–30 minutes. Most common events in your day lie between a second and an hour.
Activity 8.3 — The Smallest Division on Your Wall Clock L1 Remember

Look carefully at the face of any wall clock at home. Count the tiny marks between the numbers. What is the smallest interval of time that this clock can show?

Most wall clocks have 60 small divisions around the dial. Each one represents one second — the smallest interval the clock can read. Digital clocks often show even finer divisions if they include a seconds display.

Match the Clock — Ancient to Modern

Click one item on the left, then click its match on the right. Match each device to what it uses to measure time.

Device

Sundial
Water clock
Pendulum clock
Quartz watch
Atomic clock

Working principle

Vibrations of a quartz crystal
Shadow of the Sun
Vibrations of caesium atoms
Steady dripping of water
To-and-fro swing of a bob

Competency-Based Questions

Prerna's school is preparing for Sports Day. Her teacher shows the class an old sundial in the school courtyard, a pendulum clock in the principal's office, a quartz wristwatch on her own arm, and a digital stopwatch for the 100-metre race. She explains that each of these can measure time, but with very different accuracy.

1. Which of the following is the SI unit of time? L1

  • (a) minute
  • (b) hour
  • (c) second
  • (d) day
(c) second — every other unit is defined in terms of the second.

2. A sundial cannot be used at night or on a cloudy day. Explain why. L2

A sundial depends on a shadow cast by sunlight. At night there is no Sun, and on overcast days the Sun is hidden by clouds, so no sharp shadow forms and the time cannot be read.

3. State whether True or False: An atomic clock loses only about one second in 100 million years. L1

True. Atomic clocks are the most accurate time-keepers ever built — that is why they are used to define the second itself.

4. Fill in the blank: 1 hour = __________ seconds. L1

3600 — because 1 hour = 60 minutes and each minute is 60 seconds, so \(60 \times 60 = 3600\,\text{s}\).

5. Arrange these events in order of how long they take, shortest first: a single eye blink, a school lunch break, a heartbeat, boiling water. L3

Eye blink (~0.3 s) < heartbeat (~1 s) < boiling water (~3 min) < lunch break (~30 min).

Assertion–Reason Questions

Choose: (A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R does not explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.

A: Every clock depends on some event that repeats at a steady rate.

R: Without a periodic event, there is no reliable way to divide time into equal intervals.

(A) — both statements are true, and the second correctly explains why periodic events are essential for time-keeping.

A: A sand clock can be used in a deep cave where there is no sunlight.

R: The flow of sand depends on the position of the Sun.

(C) — A is true; a sand clock works anywhere. R is false; the sand falls under gravity, not sunlight.

A: Quartz watches keep better time than ordinary spring-driven wrist watches.

R: The vibrations of a quartz crystal are far more regular than the oscillations of a metal spring.

(A) — both true, and R explains A. Quartz crystals vibrate tens of thousands of times per second at a nearly constant frequency.

Frequently Asked Questions — Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks

What does the topic 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' cover in Class 7 Science?

The topic 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' is part of NCERT Class 7 Science Chapter 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion. It covers the key ideas of time measurement, sundial, water clock, hourglass, atomic clock, units of time, explained through everyday examples, labelled diagrams and hands-on activities drawn from the NCERT Curiosity textbook. Students learn not just definitions but also the reasoning behind each concept so they can answer competency-based questions and assertion–reason items. The lesson helps Class 7 students build a strong base for higher classes by linking each idea to real observations at home, school and in nature, and by preparing them for CBSE school assessments and Olympiads.

Why is 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' important for Class 7 NCERT Science?

'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' is important because it builds core scientific thinking that Class 7 students will use throughout middle and secondary school. NCERT Chapter 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion — introduces time measurement and related ideas that appear again in Class 8, 9 and 10 Science. Mastering this subtopic helps students read labels and safety signs, understand news about science and technology, and perform better in CBSE school exams. The chapter also encourages curiosity and evidence-based thinking — skills that support the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 focus on conceptual understanding and competency-based learning.

What are the key concepts students should remember from Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks?

The key concepts in 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' for Class 7 Science are: time measurement, sundial, water clock, hourglass, atomic clock, units of time. Students should be able to define each term in their own words, give at least one everyday example, and explain how the concept connects to other chapters in NCERT Class 7 Science. For example, linking the idea to daily life — in the kitchen, classroom or outdoors — makes revision easier. Writing short notes, drawing labelled diagrams and solving the NCERT in-text and exercise questions for Chapter 8 will help students retain these concepts for unit tests and the annual CBSE examination.

How is Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks taught using activities in NCERT Curiosity Class 7?

NCERT Curiosity Class 7 Science teaches 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' using an inquiry-based approach with Predict–Observe–Explain activities. Students are asked to make a guess first, then perform a simple experiment with safe, easily available materials, and finally explain what they observed. This matches the NEP 2020 focus on learning by doing. For Chapter 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion — the textbook includes hands-on tasks, labelled diagrams and questions that build Bloom's Taxonomy skills from Remember (L1) to Create (L6). Teachers use these activities, along with competency-based questions (CBQs) and assertion–reason items, to check real understanding rather than rote memorisation.

What real-life examples of time measurement can Class 7 students observe at home?

Class 7 students can observe time measurement at home in many simple ways linked to 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks'. Kitchens, school bags, playgrounds and the night sky are full of examples that connect to NCERT Chapter 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion. For instance, students can check labels on food and cleaning products, watch changes while cooking, or observe the Sun and Moon across a week. Keeping a small science diary — noting the date, what was observed and a quick sketch — turns everyday life into a science lab. These real-life connections make concepts stick and prepare students well for competency-based questions in CBSE Class 7 Science.

How does 'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' connect to other chapters of Class 7 Science?

'Measuring Time — From Sundials to Clocks' connects to many other chapters in NCERT Class 7 Science Curiosity. The ideas of time measurement appear again when students study related topics like heat, light, changes, life processes and Earth-Sun-Moon. For example, understanding this subtopic helps in building mental models for later chapters and for Class 8, 9 and 10 Science. Teachers often use cross-chapter questions in CBSE examinations to test whether students can apply what they learned in Chapter 8 — Measurement of Time and Motion — to new situations. This integrated approach matches the NEP 2020 and NCF 2023 focus on holistic, competency-based learning.

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