[LEAPSECS] Reliability
Rob Seaman
seaman at noao.edu
Sun Jan 4 10:47:06 EST 2009
Our humble and long suffering moderator informs me that this message
bounced a few days back since the attachment was too big. My
apologies, since my more recent messages were predicated on folks
having seen this plot.
I've put the attachment online as I should have in the first place:
http://iraf.noao.edu/~seaman/images/HowLongIsADay.pdf
Rob
--
On Jan 2, 2009, at 2:29 AM, Rob Seaman wrote:
> Let's see if an attachment will help. Here's a slide from a
> conference session a few years back. I think this was in San
> Lorenzo de El Escorial, Spain, which I mention since the highlight
> of that conference was fittingly a solar eclipse. (Well, my
> personal highlight was a day trip to see Guernica at the Reina Sofía.)
>
> If the attachment makes it through, imagine zooming out by a factor
> of 200X so the y-axis reaches one full day from 0 to 86400 seconds.
> The wiggle due to the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit and the tilt
> of the poles will vanish in the anti-aliasing. There will be a just
> barely visible offset between the sidereal ("relative to the stars")
> day length and the mean solar day length - just under 4 minutes out
> of 1440 minutes per day. Add up 4 minutes per day times 365 days
> and you end up with an extra day relative to the stars.
>
> Except that this is looking at it backwards. We really spin with
> respect to the stars. All the solar system action is foreground
> folderol. There is the simple offset to the mean solar day from
> lapping the sun once per year. And the wiggle on top of that of the
> apparent solar day from the elliptical orbit and the tilt. And the
> equation of time / analemma (not shown) from integrating the slight
> wiggle throughout the year. (Well, maybe it makes more sense to put
> the tilt into the analemma.)
>
> My thesis is that a lot of the thrashing on this list over the years
> has come from allowing the apparent solar issues to cloud the more
> fundamental mean solar day. (Yes, the pun was intended, get over it.)
>
> Rob
> ---
http://iraf.noao.edu/~seaman/images/HowLongIsADay.pdf
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