A Time Zone specifies the amount by which the local time is offset from UTC.
A time zone is usually denoted geographically (e.g. Australian Eastern Daylight Time), with a constant value in a given region.
The region where it applies and the offset from UTC are specified by a locally recognised governing authority.
Raw data
rdfs:comment
A Time Zone specifies the amount by which the local time is offset from UTC.
A time zone is usually denoted geographically (e.g. Australian Eastern Daylight Time), with a constant value in a given region.
The region where it applies and the offset from UTC are specified by a locally recognised governing authority.
skos:scopeNote
In this implementation TimeZone has no properties defined. It should be thought of as an 'abstract' superclass of all specific timezone implementations.
skos:historyNote
In the original 2006 version of OWL-Time, the TimeZone class, with several properties corresponding to a specific model of time-zones, was defined in a separate namespace "http://www.w3.org/2006/timezone#".
In the current version a class with same local name is put into the main OWL-Time namespace, removing the dependency on the external namespace.
An alignment axiom
tzont:TimeZone rdfs:subClassOf time:TimeZone .
allows data encoded according to the previous version to be consistent with the updated ontology.
skos:definition
A Time Zone specifies the amount by which the local time is offset from UTC.
A time zone is usually denoted geographically (e.g. Australian Eastern Daylight Time), with a constant value in a given region.
The region where it applies and the offset from UTC are specified by a locally recognised governing authority.
skos:note
An ontology for time zone descriptions was described in [owl-time-20060927] and provided as RDF in a separate namespace tzont:. However, that ontology was incomplete in scope, and the example datasets were selective. Furthermore, since the use of a class from an external ontology as the range of an ObjectProperty in OWL-Time creates a dependency, reference to the time zone class has been replaced with the 'stub' class in the normative part of this version of OWL-Time.
A designated timezone is associated with a geographic region. However, for a particular region the offset from UTC often varies seasonally, and the dates of the changes may vary from year to year. The timezone designation usually changes for the different seasons (e.g. Australian Eastern Standard Time vs. Australian Eastern Daylight Time). Furthermore, the offset for a timezone may change over longer timescales, though its designation might not.
Detailed guidance about working with time zones is given in http://www.w3.org/TR/timezone/ .