[LEAPSECS] the big artillery
Steve Allen
sla at ucolick.org
Tue Nov 4 17:26:10 EST 2014
On Tue 2014-11-04T21:52:05 +0000, Michael Deckers via LEAPSECS hath writ:
> Then which unit would that be? When the IERS compute a difference
> TAI - UT1, how do they do it? Do they convert the UT1 reading in
> any way before they subtract? Or, if they don't, what is the unit
> of the difference, SI seconds or "second of UT1"? The IERS
> Conventions certainly do not mention any of this. How could they
> if the units would really differ?
Guinot explained this using the term "graduation second"
in section 2.2 of 1995 Metrologia 31 431
http://iopscience.iop.org/0026-1394/31/6/002
He points out that the way the IAU has written the definitions of the
time scales uses a subtly ambiguous notation. He writes
The numerical value of UT1(IERS)-TAI does not
of course, express a duration. In this context, the "s"
only conveys the information that the readings of the
two time scales are expressed in graduation seconds.
This is basically saying that UT1(IERS)-TAI is only a difference of
two numbers. I think it's pretty much the same as supposing that a
place with a comfortable temperature is cooling off and when the
weather is freezing then the difference
Delta T = T(deg Fahrenheit) - T(deg Celsius) = 32 degrees
and when the temperature reaches -40 then
Delta T = 0 degrees
That difference is not a temperature, just like Delta T for eclipse
timing predictions is not a duration.
--
Steve Allen <sla at ucolick.org> WGS-84 (GPS)
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