Finding Any Time Using GMT Math
Time Zones And Trains
Before we had time zones, time was a local affair. Noon was simply when the sun was at its highest point in your sky. That meant every town, sometimes even neighboring towns, could be operating on slightly different clocks. Which worked fine, until trains, telegraphs, and cross-country business entered the picture.
In the 1800s, as railroads began crossing entire countries, chaos ensued. Train companies had to publish separate timetables for each station on the line, each reflecting the local solar time. Imagine trying to plan a cross-country trip with fifty different clocks.

In 1884, representatives from twenty-six nations convened in Washington, D.C., at the International Meridian Conference. Their goal: to standardize global time. The solution? Divide the world into twenty-four time zones, each roughly fifteen degrees of longitude apart, and designate one central reference point: Greenwich, England, the home of the Royal Observatory, as the Prime Meridian (0° longitude). This gave birth to Greenwich Mean Time, or GMT.[1]
How Time Zones Work Using GMT
So how do time zones work, exactly?
Each time zone represents fifteen degrees of longitude, because the Earth rotates 360 degrees in 24 hours. Divide 360 by twenty-four, and you get fifteen degrees per hour, meaning the Earth spins one time zone every sixty minutes.
So:
- If you move east of Greenwich, time moves forward.
- If you move west, time moves backward.

Finding Any Time Using GMT Math
Let’s break it down:
Local Time = GMT ± (number of time zones × 1 hour)
So, if you’re in Los Angeles (which is GMT‑8), and it’s 6:00 PM your time:
- Add 8 hours to get GMT.
- 6:00 PM + 8 hours = 2:00 AM GMT
Now flip it:
If you know it’s 3:00 PM GMT and want to know what time it is in Mumbai (GMT+5:30):
- Add 5 hours and 30 minutes:
- 3:00 PM + 5:30 = 8:30 PM Mumbai time
You might think there are only 24 hours in a day. But here’s a twist: the world actually has more than 24 time zones. How is that even possible? Let’s explore!
The Standard 24… and Beyond
When the world standardized time in the 19th century, the globe was divided into 24 slices, one for every hour of Earth’s rotation. Sounds simple, right? But humans are not simple. Borders, politics, and practicality turned that neat little system into something much messier.
Today, there are more than 38 time zones, including half-hour and quarter-hour offsets. That means while most countries follow neat one-hour steps from Greenwich Mean Time—or UTC, its modern version—others split the difference.
The 30-Minute and 45-Minute Rebels
So who bends the rules?
- India sits proudly at UTC+5:30. That half hour keeps New Delhi in sync with the rest of the country while avoiding a split between east and west.
- Nepal goes further, landing at UTC+5:45—yes, a 45-minute increment. It’s the only country in the world to use one.
- Australia has multiple half-hour zones, like South Australia at UTC+9:30.
- Newfoundland in Canada is another example, running on UTC−3:30.
Why do this? It’s all about local convenience and national identity. Time is political as much as it is astronomical.
The International Date Line: Time’s Biggest Twist
And if half-hour zones weren’t confusing enough, let’s add the International Date Line.
The Date Line runs down the Pacific Ocean, opposite Greenwich. Still, it zigzags wildly to keep island nations on the same calendar day as their neighbors. And this is where things get strange:
- On one side of the line, it might be Monday morning.
- Just a few miles away, across the line, it’s still Sunday morning.
That split creates extra time zones beyond the basic 24.
- To the west of the line, you find UTC+12.
- To the east, you find UTC−12.
- But here’s the kicker: Pacific nations like Kiribati decided they didn’t want their islands split across different days. So they created a UTC+14 zone, which means they’re the very first to welcome the New Year.
In fact, back in 2011, Samoa jumped from UTC−11 to UTC+13 overnight, literally skipping an entire Friday, to better align with business partners in Australia and New Zealand. Imagine going to bed Thursday night and waking up Saturday morning—Friday vanished from the calendar!
Thanks to the Date Line’s creative zigzagging, we ended up with three additional zones: UTC−12, UTC+13, and UTC+14.
Why More Than 24?
If every zone followed only whole hours, the math would be clean. But geography doesn’t care about neat lines, and humans care about daylight. By tweaking time with half-hour or quarter-hour offsets, governments keep sunrise, sunset, and business hours practical.
That’s why we say there are more than 24 hours in a day. It’s not that the Earth spins slower—it’s that our clocks are adjusted for human life.
Where Time Zones Disappear
Now let’s push timekeeping to the extreme. Let’s say you have a meeting with Santa at the North Pole. Technically, you could tell Santa that the meeting will be at 3:00 PM, but he shows up at 5:00 PM and says he’s on time. And he’s right. Why is that? In the North Pole, time zones disappear.
That’s because all lines of longitude converge there, which means technically every time zone passes through the Pole. In practice, there’s no official time zone at all. Researchers and explorers simply pick one—often UTC, or the time zone of their home base. If you plan a meeting at the Pole, coordination depends on agreement, not geography.

Coffee at the Top of the World
So maybe the North Pole is too extreme. Maybe you do have a meeting close to the North Pole. Where are you going to eat? Well, just eight degrees south of the North Pole, in Alert, Nunavut, Canada, there’s a Tim Hortons. Yes, this is the northernmost Tim Hortons in the world! Which, in my opinion, would be worth going to alert, Nunavut, Canada. And this is not a paid advertisement, but Tim Horton’s has the world’s best coffee! So, suppose you do have a meeting near the North Pole. In that case, you can do it over a double-double and some Timbits, and enjoy their delicious, excellent, incredible coffee.

Actually, the Tim Horton’s in Alert, Nunavut is not available to the public, since that location is a weather station and Canadian Forces station. BUT, in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut, there is an Apex C‑store where you can find the next amazing Tim Hortons!
Why This Still Matters
We live in a globally connected world. Whether you’re planning a Zoom call across time zones, flying internationally, or scheduling an interview with a podcast guest halfway across the globe, knowing how time zones work can save you stress, missed appointments, and awkward calendar mistakes.
And poetically, every time you calculate the difference from Greenwich, you’re tracing your place on the spinning Earth, mapping your moment in the great turning of time.
Flashcard Takeaways:
- The world agreed on 24 time zones in 1884, but today there are more than 38.
- Some countries use half-hour or even 45-minute offsets to fit their lives better.
- At the North Pole, time zones vanish—you choose one. And if you’re in Alert, Nunavut, Canada, every hour is coffee hour at Tim Hortons.
- Tim Hortons has the best coffee, ever!
That’s all for this Flashcard Friday. Next time you look at a world clock, remember: it’s never as simple as just 24 hours. And the next time you look at your clock, remember: it is as simple as 24 hours. Time is brief, life is brief, and with that being said, carpe diem, my friends!
[1] Howse, Derek. Greenwich Time and the Longitude. Philip Wilson Publishers, 1997.