[LEAPSECS] leap seconds schedule prior to 1972
John Sauter
John_Sauter at systemeyescomputerstore.com
Tue Apr 12 23:32:00 EDT 2016
On Wed, 2016-04-13 at 00:37 +0100, Zefram wrote:
> John Sauter wrote:
> >
> > https://www.systemeyescomputerstore.com/proleptic_UTC.pdf.
> Your abstract says you provide a leap schedule for 1900 to 1971, but
> actually you provide a leap schedule for -1000 to 1971. The abstract
> seems to suggest some distinction in objective between what is done
> for
> the 20th century and for the preceding 2900 years, aiming to "cover"
> the latter but "construct a table of leap seconds" for the former, a
> distinction that doesn't seem to make sense and doesn't actually
> exist
> in the paper. (You do give the leap table in a second format for the
> 20th century portion, but in substance this is only duplicating part
> of
> the table earlier in the paper.)
>
> Your proleptic leap schedule generally looks sane. I haven't checked
> the numbers in detail. It is good to incorporate Tony Finch's pUTC,
> as
> you do. Where more than 12 leaps are required in a year, your
> extension
> to leaping on the 15th day of a month is sensible.
>
> Your delta-T table confuses points in time with the intervals between
> them. The delta-T column itself applies to (the start of?) the
> specific
> year listed, but the "change in delta-T" and "seconds per year"
> columns
> apply to the interval between the year listed on that line and the
> year
> listed on the following line.
>
> The column labelling for that table, and its accompanying text, isn't
> great. You should state what delta-T means, address units, and
> generally
> make clearer what the table means.
>
> You write generally as if UTC exists only for 1972 onwards. You
> should
> acknowledge the existence of the former (1961 to 1971) rubber-seconds
> UTC, and make clear that your schedule is not a proleptic extension
> of
> the whole of UTC but only of the leap-seconds form of UTC.
>
> Your NTP material is mostly a mistake. For NTP's purpose of clock
> synchronisation, it needs to know about contemporary leap seconds,
> but
> has no need for knowledge of historical leap seconds. There is
> therefore
> no value, for this purpose, in extending the historical leap schedule
> further back. It is entirely erroneous to suppose that this paper
> has
> any bearing on NTP, and I see no value in the paper mentioning NTP.
> Some of the specific things you say about NTP are in error, but I
> won't
> go into detail due to this overriding concern.
>
> You should address the question, currently ignored, of what time
> scale
> your proleptic UTC is based on. If your aim is to fully construct
> a time scale, this is a necessary component. Actual UTC, both of
> the leap-seconds form and the rubber-seconds form, is defined as
> a transformation of TAI. TAI is only defined back to some time in
> 1955, because it is defined by the actual operation of atomic clocks.
> This covers Finch's pUTC, but you go far further back, millennia
> before
> there are any atomic clocks. The delta-T figures that you used are,
> strictly, referenced to TT. To construct a usable time scale you'll
> need
> to use something close to TT as the basis, and manage the transition
> between your proleptic basis time scale and the real TAI-based UTC.
> I'd be inclined to use the basis TAI(TT) = TT - 32.184 s prior to
> 1977,
> switching to TAI at 1977-01-01T00:00:00 TAI when by definition
> TAI(TT)
> = TAI, though this does mean using a different basis from the real
> UTC
> for five years of real leap-seconds-UTC history.
>
> It would be helpful for you to provide a distinctive name for the
> time
> scale that you construct. "Proleptic UTC" is a reasonable
> description,
> but not sufficiently specific to use as a name.
>
> -zefram
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Thank you for your detailed criticism, Zefram. I will think about what
you have said and revise the article.
John Sauter (John_Sauter at systemeyescomputerstore.com)
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