[LEAPSECS] The relation between calendars and leap seconds.
Adi Stav
adi at stav.org.il
Wed Nov 12 01:09:23 EST 2008
On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 10:23:36PM -0700, Rob Seaman wrote:
> Adi Stav wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 04:13:25PM +0000, Tony Finch wrote:
>>>
>>> I agree with your requirements 2,3,4 and I note that UTC doesn't
>>> satisfy
>>> 3, which is another statement of this timeless predictability
>>> requirement.
>>> (Your requirement 4 is only relatively timeless, since it allows for
>>> changes in the definition of the second.)
>>
>> Have there been suggestions, indeed, for such a predictable SI-
>> second-based
>> calendar that synchronizes with the Earth's rotation?
>
>
> Well, that is the UTC that we have. Two timescales, earth orientation
> and interval. Compromise a little on the SI part and a little on the
> solar day part to jigger these two things into a single standard.
We don't how many seconds there will be in 2009-12-31 23:59; there
might be 60, 59, or 61. So the UTC calendar is not predictable.
I can easily imagine such predictable systems, such as adding "permenant
leap seconds" regularly into the year according to some pre-determined
formula, but I don't think I've every seen such a thing proposed.
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