June 30, 2015 will officially be a
bit longer than usual because an extra second, or 'leap' second, will be added
to the day, according to NASA.
Strictly speaking, a day lasts 86,400 seconds. That is the
case, according to the time standard that people use in their daily lives -
Coordinated Universal Time, or UTC. UTC is "atomic time" - the
duration of one second is based on extremely predictable electromagnetic
transitions in atoms of cesium. These transitions are so reliable that the
cesium clock is accurate to one second in 1,400,000 years.
However, the mean solar day - the average length of a day, based on how
long it takes Earth to rotate - is about 86,400.002 seconds long. That's
because Earth's rotation is gradually slowing down a bit, due to a kind of
braking force caused by the gravitational tug of war between Earth, the Moon
and the Sun.
Scientists estimate that the mean solar day has not been 86,400 seconds
long since the year 1820 or so. This difference of 2 milliseconds, or two
thousandths of a second - far less than the blink of an eye - hardly seems
noticeable at first.
But if this small discrepancy were repeated every day for an entire
year, it would add up to almost a second. Although Earth's rotation is slowing
down on average, the length of each individual day varies in an unpredictable
way. The length of day is influenced by many factors, mainly the atmosphere
over periods less than a year.
Typically, a leap second is inserted either on June 30 or December 31.
Normally, the clock would move from 23:59:59 to 00:00:00 the next day.
But with the leap second on June 30, UTC will move from 23:59:59 to
23:59:60, and then to 00:00:00 on July 1. In practice, many systems are instead
turned off for one second.
Previous leap seconds have created challenges for some computer systems
and generated some calls to abandon them altogether. One reason is that the
need to add a leap second cannot be anticipated far in advance.
From 1972, when leap seconds were first implemented, through 1999, leap
seconds were added at a rate averaging close to one per year.
Since then, leap seconds have become less frequent. This June's leap second will be only the fourth to be added since 2000.
No comments:
Post a Comment