From sla at ucolick.org Sat Jun 18 00:45:03 2016 From: sla at ucolick.org (Steve Allen) Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2016 21:45:03 -0700 Subject: [LEAPSECS] midyear leap roundup Message-ID: <20160618044503.GA22402@ucolick.org> Last week saw the Science of Time symposium at Harvard with many of the Time Lords in attendance. The subject matter was far broader than just leap seconds, but it gave a glimpse into the situation after last year's ITU-R WRC-15 meeting. For 15 years the subject of leap seconds had been ITU-R Question 236/7, and that is no longer open. So the ITU-R has no action to perform until the 2023 WRC. Folks at Science of Time indicated that actions other than in the ITU-R had to wait until that process had failed. In the mean time the BIPM expects to produce a document that (unlike ITU-R TF.460) actually defines the construction of a time scale. It makes sense that we should be able to see that years in advance of the 2023 WRC. Looking back, leading up to the WRC had been various Conference Preparatory Meetings (CPM) that produced the draft document with the methods for dealing with leap seconds (A, B, C, and, much later, D) to be submitted to WRC-15. During a several month period leading up to that document the logs for leap second web pages showed a two-week periodicity with thousands of HTTP GETs being funnelled through a weblog hosted on a server accessible via a VPN. That seemed to confirm that the ITU-R process operates in a very closed fashion. We can hope that from now on the process will be more open. Subsequent to the WRC-15 meeting the web logs have indicated etentes between the US and the countries who submitted method D (which said "make no change") to the WRC-15. I surmise that the Department of State holds a grudge against any country which dared to oppose the "abolish leap seconds immediately" position of the US. -- Steve Allen WGS-84 (GPS) UCO/Lick Observatory--ISB 260 Natural Sciences II, Room 165 Lat +36.99855 1156 High Street Voice: +1 831 459 3046 Lng -122.06015 Santa Cruz, CA 95064 http://www.ucolick.org/~sla/ Hgt +250 m