[LEAPSECS] Schedule for success
Rob Seaman
seaman at noao.edu
Mon Dec 22 14:18:39 EST 2008
The fact that the mean solar rate differs from the SI rate is the
whole enchilada. I have to put the Christmas lights on the tree, but
you could search leapsecs for "secular" and "periodic" to locate my
screed on this topic.
Rob
--
On Dec 22, 2008, at 11:43 AM, M. Warner Losh wrote:
> In message: <F0158734-CA0B-4CD1-BB0E-6B0AD31A1EB7 at noao.edu>
> Rob Seaman <seaman at noao.edu> writes:
> : Tony Finch wrote:
> :
> : > On Mon, 22 Dec 2008, Rob Seaman wrote:
> : >>
> : >> No. We have been using mean solar time formally since the 19th
> : >> century, and informally since we woke each morning to light
> shining
> : >> through
> : >> the entrance of the cave.
> : >
> : > Apparent solar time is not mean solar time. Remember that for a
> lot of
> : > history we used rubber hours that varied according to the time
> between
> : > sunrise and sunset. Mean solar time cannot be established without
> : > reasonably accurate clocks.
> :
> : Either you haven't read this message yet:
> :
> : http://six.pairlist.net/pipermail/leapsecs/2008-December/
> 000714.html
> :
> : or I've yet again failed to make my point.
> :
> : Mother Earth "establishes" mean solar time simply by spinning on its
> : axis and orbiting the sun. Apparent solar time is a mere
> happenstance
> : of angles. Rates matter more than offsets.
>
> But the second is no longer defined in terms of solar time, so why
> does this really matter? UTC isn't the same as local time for most of
> the planet. We already do time zones, and we already accept an hour
> or two of difference between our local time and the sun's time. Why
> then the slavish need to keep UTC corresponding to the time at what is
> at best an arbitrary meridian? The second no longer measures earth
> time.
>
> Warner
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