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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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The science of leap time

Posted: Thursday, February 28, 2008 6:20 PM by Alan Boyle


NIST
Atomic clocks can be as
small as computer chips.

It took astronomers 5,000 years or so to figure out how leap years work - and with every technological leap, we're becoming increasingly dependent on ultra-precise timekeeping.

As a result, even tiny leaps in time are becoming just as important - and just as controversial - as leap days and leap weeks must have seemed back in the days of Julius Caesar and Pope Gregory XIII.

We have Julius and Gregory to thank for Friday's leap day, the extra day that's periodically tacked onto the month of February.

Even before Julius Caesar's reign, the ancients had figured out that a 365-day year came closest to matching the annual round of equinoxes and solstices, which were so important for planting schedules and holy rites linked to astronomical observations. But over the years, the seasons gradually fell out of sync, and extra days had to be stuck in haphazardly to put the year back on track.

With an assist from the astronomer Sosigenes, Julius Caesar instituted the much more reliable Julian calendar, which stuck a 366th day in the month of February every four years. (OK, when the Romans started the leap-year habit in 45 B.C., they added a leap day every three years. Which was bad. But eventually they got it right.)

There was still a slight discrepancy between the calendar cycle and Earth's actual solar year, however, and by the time Gregory entered the picture in the year 1582, the difference added up to 10 days. Armed with updated astronomical advice, the pope revised the calendar again, and added an exception to the four-year leap rule. Leap days would be added to century years divisible by 400 (such as 2000), but not to the other century years (such as 1900 or 2100).

And that's where we're at right now. Even Gregory didn't completely solve the problem. There are still little discrepancies that crop up between the calendar and our planet's yearly rounds. If you could check Earth's precise position in its orbit year over year, you'd find an average yearly discrepancy of 26 seconds.

John Lowe, leader of the atomic standards group at the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Time and Frequency Division, said that gap isn't close to requiring any correction ... yet.

"It's going to take 3,300 years for one day of slippage," Lowe told me today. "I doubt anybody is worrying about that right now."

So don't expect any additional tweaking to the Gregorian calendar until, say, the year 5000 or so. There is another leap-time issue that will have to be resolved much sooner than that, however. One of the biggest dilemmas facing timekeepers today has to do with the leap seconds that have been added to the year periodically since 1972.

Leap seconds aren't directly related to the length of the year, but rather to an infinitesimal difference between the length of a 24-hour day (that is, 86,400 seconds) and the international atomic standard for the length of a second. The difference (known in geekspeak as DUT1) accumulates because our planet's rotation is gradually slowing down.

Every time the gap between atomic and astronomical time reaches 0.9 seconds, a leap second is added to bring the two standards back into sync. Right now, the gap is almost 0.4 seconds - but Geoff Chester, an astronomer at the U.S. Naval Observatory, says the discrepancy could start picking up speed.

"Fifty years or so from now, it's entirely possible that we may be adding two or as many as four leap seconds per year," Chester told me.

That's very inconvenient for the folks who rely on the precise, steady timekeeping of the atomic system - such as the people in charge of the world's computer networks, power grids and even the Global Positioning System.

"Sooner rather than later, this is going to become a real nuisance, so there is debate right now over how we're going to reduce this nuisance factor," Chester said. "The simplest solution is just to do away with the leap second."

However, that doesn't sit too well with the folks who deal with timekeeping in the astronomical world. Without the leap seconds, the atomic time standard would run further and further ahead of natural time cycles.

"If we did away with leap seconds, we would find ourselves at some time in the same position that they did in the 1500s - one minute off, two minutes off, five minutes," NIST's Lowe said. "All of the charts and tables stating sunrise and sunset, those would all have to be adjusted periodically to accommodate the slipping time scale."

Earth's time lords, at the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service as well as at the International Telecommunications Union, have been talking about proposals to do away with leap seconds, or at least wait until the discrepancy adds up to a leap hour. Lowe and Chester say their organizations have no position for or against the idea, but will do whatever the international standard-setters tell them to do.

Lowe doesn't expect a resolution of the dilemma anytime soon - and in the meantime, there's likely to be more leap seconds added to the clock. "This has been going on for the last dozen years," he said. "Large international bodies like these never proceed too quickly."

But one thing is for sure: Every year, society is becoming more and more dependent on precision timekeeping. For Lowe and his colleagues, the most important job isn't whether an extra day is added to a year, or whether an extra second is added to a minute. Rather, it's to make sure that every second of the year is accurate and accounted for.

"We build these highly precise clocks not to define the time of day, but to define the length of a second," Lowe said. "That defines frequency, so many cycles per second - and frequency is what drives our technological world, from television and radio to our global telecommunication systems. The big satellites that carry massive amounts of data operate at a very high frequency, so they need very stable calibration.

"That's why we build these incredibly accurate instruments," he said. And that's why every second counts.

Update for 9 p.m. ET Feb. 28: I revised my reference to the 26-second annual discrepancy between the Gregorian calendar year and the tropical year (which adds up to one day in 3,300 years or so), because the actual discrepancy can't be judged on a year-over-year basis. For more about the so-called 4,000-year rule, check out this Web page.

Also, to celebrate leap day, you can either propose to your beau (if you're a woman) or try out the Project Leap Year Web site, which gives you the opportunity to share your leap-day dreams. See if you can find my dream destination!

Update for 1 p.m. ET Feb. 29: I fixed the reference to the Gregorian vs. Julian difference to 10 instead of 11 days. The calendar did jump 11 days when the changeover was made, from Oct. 4 to Oct. 15, 1582, but of course one of those days was the usual turnover from Thursday to Friday.

Also, my msnbc.com colleague Lori Smith points out that this year brings an entire leap month on the Jewish calendar.

Update for 2:30 p.m. ET Feb. 29: Check out these leap-day video clips: On NBC's TODAY show, Marina Maiuri follows through on the age-old tradition by popping the question to her boyfriend. And on MSNBC's "ZeitGeist," Willie Geist takes advantage of the extra day to pander to you with new video of a cute baby polar bear and other diversions.

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Comments

This sure is a very technical subject... I'm just thankful that I get a birthday every four years!!
Wait a second!
thank u for telling uuuuussssssss
Why don't they consider a time alternative that just has visual objects of realistic position? Time something else like an atomic count and link it to the visual references of our position in the universe, galaxy, solar system and personally on the planet. Why keep up the prediction necessity? Then we could celebrate our birth moment!
Awesome stuff.  You rock Alan!
So what is the measure of time that is less than seconds? I mean by definition. Because it does exist. I always thought it was interesting to see how basketball games , for example, keep track of that time in between the seconds. So now we get aglimpse of the pre-buzzer lesser than a count time. Time travel is becoming increasing possible as time goes on. But you know since it could be possible that would mean someday it happens and those time travelers are already here. Peac be with you.
Does anybody really know what time it is?
Keep it up, and they will resolve Zeno's paradox, only the other way around!
Why not just add the leap seconds together so that as the leap year comes by just add them in there?

So this year for example you would have one extra day and 5 seconds added to February. And as the problem increases just increase the seconds accordingly so that when we are adding 4 extra seconds a year it would come out to one day and 20 seconds.

Great article btw.
I think the concept of time is interesting, but its nothing more than Man's attempt to define change in the world/universe.  There will always be a need for leaps so long as humans continue to "cement" time into defined calendar years (and weeks, and days, and so on).  Time is not meant to be cemented in place.  It is relative, as we all know.  It constantly changes.
Time and Alan both rock!
This seems like a debate between people who want to base time on a unit (a precise second) vs people who want to make sure time is measured in the how often the earth spins on its axis and how often it rotates around the sun. The year based on our orbit was needed for farmers and such waaaayyyyy back in the day. Now it seems moot, it really is similar to the idea of day light savings time. Realisitically time to humans is nothing but a measure of change. Be it in the Earth position around the sun or what have you. Celelbrating a birthday or New Years is almost crazy when you think about it; hoooray, its been X number of rotations around the sun since you were born.
So, on my home planet, we use the time between seconds to contimplate our own contributions to the universal collective soul.
I seem to remember a slightly different take on the real world/calendar application of the leap year system from, of all things, an episode of "Ripley's Believe It or Not!" from the 1980s (when Jack Palance was the host) and there was a factoid that every 400 years, we were supposed to get a 2nd Leap Day to balance things out (so that we'd actually get a February 30th that year, believe it or not).  Obviously, that didn't happen, but does anyone know what the rationale behind the concept was (I'd always been taught that one revolution around the Sun is 365.26 days, so to me it made sense that the .25 portion was dealt with every 4 years, leaving a cumulative .01 discrepancy annually needing to be addressed eventually)?  That version of the show doesn't re-run these days, and I don't think it's been released on DVD/video, so I've not been able to find out.  Thanks!
It doesn't matter what time/date a clock/calendar shows as long as everyone's clock/calendar shows the same thing.
"on my home planet, we use the time between seconds to contimplate our own contributions to the universal collective soul"

Classic!! Laughed 'til I cried!!!
I'd always heard that the concept of time was a human invention. Figures!
And while we're at it, leap day aside, exactly why DOES February have only 28 days when some months have thirty one? What was the rationale behind that?
The solution to this "leap second" problem is obvious: we need to adjust the speed of the earth's orbit around the sun &/or speed of the earth's rotation so it will more precisely coincide with our atomic clocks' measurements of time. A few well-placed gigantic rocket engines would do the trick, & it's existing technology, so we know it'll work.
Every day I've got these incredible brainstorms, but do they ever give ME a Nobel Prize? NOOOOOOO!
Re: second Leap Day.  Actually the rule of 400 is just the opposite.  Century years (1800, 1900, and 2000) are NOT leap years unless they are divisible by 400.  Thus 2000 was a leap year, 1900 was not.
Facinating information! An interesting read...
Denise, back in Roman times (pre-Julius Caesar), February was the last month of the year. The calendar year began on March 1. So February tended to get the short end of the stick. Whenever someone needed an extra day to beef up their favorite month (July for Julius Caesar, August for Augustus Caesar), they'd steal a day from February. The Romans apparently considered odd numbers to be luckier than even numbers, and that's why the Caesars saw a benefit in making their favorite months 31 days instead of 30. Originally, the leap day was inserted somewhere around Feb. 24, and the day was considered to be especially unlucky. That idea of an unlucky leap day has persisted in some areas of the world, and it's considered unlucky to be married on leap day.

http://www.timeanddate.com/date/leap-day-february-29.html

The idea of adding extra days to the end of the year still comes up every once in a while with regard to calendar reform. Over the centuries, overly sensible folks have come up with various schemes for a universal, unchanging calendar ... which usually inserts out-of-the-ordinary leap days at the end of the year, or smack-dab in the middle. I wrote about one such scheme a couple of years ago, developed by a Johns Hopkins professor:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6699413/

This scheme would periodically insert a whole week between June and July, called the Newton mini-month. Under this so-called C&T system, today is not Feb. 29, but Feb. 5, 2008. Next year, the day we call July 1 would be called Newton 4 instead.
I would love to know how they figured out that there was a discrepancy between the 365 day calendar and the seasons getting out of sync.  Where can I go to learn more?
I don't think I have time for this ....
Brian Woods, the year is closer to 365.2422 days, not 365.26.  You are essentially correct that we add 1 day every four years to get the .25 days.  But now there is an excess of .0078, so every 100 years we SUBTRACT one day -- or rather, eliminate leap day that year.  But then, there will a .0022 deficit, so every 400 years we add back the leap day.  Now, there is only .0003 days excess every 400 years. I don't know if the calendar specifies what to do about this excess, but note that it amounts to an extra day every 3,000 years.  Also, my number 365.2422 days per year is also only an approximation, and the exact answer itself varies due to gravitational influences of other planets (speeding and slowing Earth in its orbit) and that Earth's daily rotation varies and slows (as the article pointed out).
.
In the end, our technology and social structure require certainty and predictability, but the Earth's environment cannot provide this -- time to leave the nest...
Kathy, the ancients put great stock in the lunar cycle as well as characteristics of the solar cycle (equinoxes and solstices, etc.). That was the motivation behind ancient observatories such as Stonehenge. So they devised various ways of keeping track of those dates. The Babylonians had a lunar calendar, but found they had to add extra months to get the calendar back in sync with the seasons. Even before Julius Caesar, the Egyptians figured out that you had to add a day every four years:

http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761560321/Calendar.html

I found this discussion of calendars through the ages to be pretty interesting:

http://webexhibits.org/calendars/calendar-ancient.html
As long as it's 5 o'clock somewhere...
Thank you, Alan.  At least it's Friday today, Martin.
:-)
Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
--Groucho Marx

Great article. Makes sense to me. But you have to consider my perspective. I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe.
Very interesting.  In a less technical vein, looks like I was one of the misinformed who confuses "Leap Day" with "Sadie Hawkins Day":

http://www.leapyearday.com/February29isNOTSadieHawkinsDay.htm


- mm

Nice work, but I think you will find that in 1582 Gregory XIII corrected an error of 10 days, not 11. He did this by declaring that the day after Friday, October 4, 1582, would be October the 15th. Whereas, 11 days were corrected in 1752, when Britain and the Colonies switched, Parliament declared that the day following September 2 would be September 14.  So, that day George Washington's birthday went from February 11 (Old Style) to February 22 (New Style).

[Alan adds: D-oh! I've fixed the reference. Thanks for setting me straight, Joe!]

I still like the description of a second as being the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium-133 atom (Machinery Handbook, 9th Edition, 1974). That should impress the ladies.
wow, some really in-depth discussions...that I totally didn't understand. I feel it's better to just be happy with the leap year and not know the "inner workings".

Just goes to show that not even time can be controlled
It would have been interesting to compare that to the types of calendars from around the world.  The Jewish calendar adds a leap month on occasion including the current year of 5768; there is some formula the rabbis came up with that I can't recall that works things out so that holidays are in the proper time.  I recall that there were various calendars from South America that are different than the Gregorian.  As I recall, the Muslim calendar doesn't correct itself.  That explains why their holidays don't appear in the same time every year compared to the Gregorian calendar.  
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once. Space is what keeps it all from happening in the same place.
You think you have problems...I was 1 second late for work and almost got fired.  I've got to bone-up on this leap second thing so this doesn't happen again.  

What is my job...I update sundials!
I'll bet those darn republicans caused this whole mess, just so they can start an extra hurricane every 22.6 years!
Even time has been corrupted by man imperfect thought.
Forget the antiquated system of time measurement we currently use.  What Stardate is it?
Didn't the Mayan calendar have this all figured out already?  Why not follow their calendar??
Maybe these time experts can help me solve another problem that I have.  My dog was born on Feb. 29th.  How do I figure out her age?
September of 1752 brought some interesting debates to Parliament...would landlords be charging a full month's rent for only 19 days?  Would investments that pay per month dole out a full portion?
Great article, but about the leap second. It is not that the earth slows by .6 seconds per year. It is that the atomic clocks and the actual rotation differ about that much. The Naval Observatory website has an explanation (http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/leapsec.html). The earth has actually slowed approximately 2 MILLSECONDS between 1820 and 1999. If it was .6 seconds per year the day would have lengthen by 1 minute and 40 seconds since 1820.  The .6 is not the rate of slowing, it is the difference between the hyper accurate atomic clocks and the messy real world.
"..time comes by virtue of motion and because mind is inherently aware of sequentiality. From a practical viewpoint, motion is essential to time.....we do not know the absolute limits of space, but we do know that the absolute of time is eternity."
(from the Urantia Book 12:5.1,2)

,,,And the beat goes on, la-da-da-da-dee...

I agree with Martin - at least somewhere, in some continuum it is 5:00 o'clock and the sun has passed over the yardarm - so let us raise a glass of our favorite beverage and make a toast to "The Syncopated Clock"
Ahh, Luke, I sense a disturbance in the Force.

Dawson, you're correct as far as it goes. I hope I didn't imply that the discrepancy is approaching 0.4 seconds (not 0.6 seconds) per year. Rather, 0.4 seconds (as of next month, see below)  is the accumulated discrepancy since the last leap second was added, back in 2005:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8476418

This excellent Web page helps to explain the leap second issue and also shows that as of yesterday, the discrepancy was 330 milliseconds, plus or minus 5 milliseconds (the UT1-UTC value will reach 400 milliseconds in March):

http://tf.nist.gov/pubs/bulletin/leapsecond.htm

When you get down to the subsecond scale, Earth's rotation is indeed messy. I couldn't get this into the original item, but the length is affected by such factors as the amount of snowfall in the Northern Hemisphere (which affects angular momentum). And it's possible that the difference between atomic and astronomical time could be basically revised in the other direction if Earth's rotation sped up.

The trend in rotation can be uneven. However, the general trend is toward a slower rate of rotation and a longer day, as explained in the story linked above. Earth's transfer of rotational momentum to the moon is one of the factors behind this.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_of_the_
Moon#Tidal_evolution_of_the_lunar_orbit


You've provided a great link to the USNO site in your own comment ... and that pretty much supports what I tried to say:

"The length of the mean solar day has increased by roughly 2 milliseconds since it was exactly 86,400 seconds of atomic time about 1.79 centuries ago (i.e. the 179 year difference between 1999 and 1820).   That is, the length of the mean solar day is at present about 86,400.002 seconds instead of exactly 86,400 seconds.  Over the course of one year, the difference accumulates to almost one second, which is compensated by the insertion of a leap second into the scale of UTC with a current regularity of a little less than once per year.  Other factors also affect the Earth, some in unpredictable ways, so that it is necessary to monitor the Earth's rotation continuously. "

Sorry about any confusion I may have caused.

So, on what day of what year does the year slow to a complete stop?
So, on what day of what year does the earth slow to a complete stop?
I was wondering about what effects global geological occurrences have on the speed of the earth's rotation. I thought I read that the earthquake that hit Indonesia in 2004 had perhaps slowed the earth down by an undetermined amount. If so, has anybody calculated the amount of rotational speed lost or gained by such an event yet? What effect on the earth's rotation has: the rise of a volcano mount, the rise of sea levels, the erosion of mountain chains, or even human-built structures like skycrapers or China's Three Gorges Dam? Is there an organization that measures and correlates rotational speed gain or loss from such events? I know I won't notice a difference, but people keeping track of time in ten decimal places will. Just curious, that's all.
Only time has a one way sign
while everything else seems unconfined
time is evolution through integration
toward a great epiphany of celebration

Time kisses the bud which allows it to open
yet curses the blossom and sends it to seed
but the seed is the being which gives time its true theme
of all possibility that comes from eternity

Each season comes new through a progressing spiral
yet returns from last year a helix all the while
like water that flows and moves onward and down
but with waves that will grow and keep coming around

The past will give way to only the future
but the present breaks through to touch the eternal
each moment with memory that holds a potential
through seminal lines that will reach the eventual

Nostalgia is fantasy lost under the bridge
yet hope a reality across the wide rivers width
and memory a map of some things which have been
but anticipation wheels that on your road spin

Time is supported only by rhythm
yet rhythm will answer to nothing but time
without having either there would have been neither
but with both together they dance on forever

The temporal can never become the eternal
but has no beginning and will never end
like the surface of earth which is not infinite
yet with no boundaries and without an edge to it

Outside of time is the nest of eternity
which yearns to create the seeds of temporality
as chronological infinity cradles all time
crystalizing creation out from the sublime.


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