A sundial is a device that measures time by the position of  the Sun. In common designs such as the horizontal sundial, the sun casts  a shadow from its style onto a surface marked with lines indicating the hours of the day. The style is the time-telling edge of the gnomon,  often a thin rod or a sharp, straight edge. As the sun moves across the  sky, the shadow-edge aligns with different hour-lines. All sundials  must be aligned with the axis of the Earth's rotation to tell the  correct time. In most designs, the style must point towards true  celestial north (not the north magnetic pole or south magnetic pole).  That is, the style's horizontal angle must equal the sundial's  geographical latitude.
In the horizontal sundial (also called a garden sundial),  the plane that receives the shadow is aligned horizontally, rather than  being perpendicular to the style as in the equatorial dial. Hence, the line of shadow does not rotate uniformly on the dial face; rather, the hour lines are spaced according to the rule.
where
λ is the sundial's geographical latitude  (and the angle the style makes with horizontal),
θ is the angle between  a given hour-line and the noon hour-line (which always points towards true North) on the plane, and
t is the number of hours before or after noon.
For example,
the angle θ of the 3pm hour-line would equal the arctangent of sin(λ), since tan(45°) = 1. When λ equals 90° (at the North Pole),  the horizontal sundial becomes an equatorial sundial; the style points  straight up (vertically), and the horizontal plane is aligned with the  equatorial place; the hour-line formula becomes θ = 15° × t, as for an  equatorial dial. However, a horizontal sundial is impractical on the  Earth's equator, where λ equals 0°, the style would lie flat in the plane and cast no shadow.
The chief advantages of the horizontal sundial are that it is easy to  read, and the sun lights the face throughout the year. All the  hour-lines intersect at the point where the gnomon's style crosses the  horizontal plane. Since the style is aligned with the Earth's rotational  axis, the style points true North and its angle with the horizontal equals the sundial's geographical latitude  λ. A sundial designed for one latitude can be used in another latitude,  provided that the sundial is tilted upwards or downwards by an angle  equal to the difference in latitude. For example, a sundial designed for  a latitude of 40° can be used at a latitude of 45°, if the sundial  plane is tilted upwards by 5°, thus aligning the style with the Earth's  rotational axis.
Tower Hill tube station has a large horizontal sundial in a small courtyard          outside the Tube station in London, England.  
| Sundial, Tower hill station, London | 

 
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