
Clocks across the majority of European countries are set to go forward by one hour early on Sunday as the continent moves to daylight saving time, also known as summer time.
Clocks in most European nations including Germany advance by one hour at 2 am (0100 GMT) to 3 am, heralding longer evenings and brighter days.
This means that for the coming months parts of Europe will be on Central European Summer Time (CEST), before moving back to Central European Time (CET) in the autumn, when clocks go back again by an hour on October 25.
The aim of the change is to make better use of daylight in the shorter days of the winter in the northern hemisphere.
The signal for the automatic changeover of the clocks in Germany comes from the Federal Institute of Physics and Metrology (PTB) in the northern city of Braunschweig, also known as Brunswick in English.
The institute's experts ensure that radio-controlled clocks, station clocks and many industrial clocks are supplied with the signal via a long-wave transmitter called DCF77 in Mainflingen near Frankfurt.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Flourishing in Retirement: Individual Accounts of Post-Vocation Satisfaction - 2
Pick Your Favored kind of soup - 3
As her kidneys fail and time runs short, this activist fights to decriminalize euthanasia in Mexico - 4
20-year-old who threatened German train attack remanded in custody - 5
Must-Sit in front of the Programs from Europe and the US
Most loved Web-based feature: Which Stage Do You Like
We may be witnessing the messy death of a star in real time
Old food pyramid vs. RFK Jr.'s new food pyramid. See what's different.
Freed whale gets stranded again off German coast
The Main 15 Applications for Efficiency and Association
An Artemis 2 astronaut took a 'bath' on camera on the way to the moon. Mission Control's reaction was priceless (video)
'Wuthering Heights' trailer features Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi in a steamy forbidden romance
Pilot captures jaw-dropping northern lights show from 36,000 feet (photos)
China Just Got A Lot Closer To Its First-Ever Manned Moon Landing











