2008 gets longer by one second !

by caliber 5 Replies latest social entertainment

  • caliber
    caliber

    2008 Gets Longer By One Second

    Posted on: Tuesday, 9 December 2008, 09:50 CST

    The world's timekeepers are making the year 2008 even longer by adding a leap second to the last day of the year.

    The Earth is slowing down, which requires timekeepers to add an extra second to their atomic clocks to keep in sync with Earth's slightly slowing rotation. So on December 31st at 6:59:59 p.m., an extra second will be added before 7:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

    The extra second, plus the extra day on Feb. 29, makes the year 2008 the longest year since 1992.

    The decision to add the extra second was made by an international consortium of time keepers and was announced on Monday. Digital technology and world commerce depend on accurate to-the-second timekeeping, said Geoff Chester, spokesman for the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, responsible for one-third of the world's atomic clocks.

    He said that most cellular phone providers and computer operating systems check with the world's atomic clock and update their time to add the leap second automatically.

    Leap seconds were started in 1972, sometimes twice a year. This is the first leap second since December 31, 2005. This is the fourth year to have a leap day and a leap second.

    The Naval Observatory will have a party at 6:59:60 p.m.

    "We watch the clock and make sure nothing breaks," Chester said. "It's an early New Year's celebration." A brief one.

    Seen on the news where ironically this one second addition caused more problems than the Y2K

    one must reset some electronic equipment !

    Cal

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    Well, thank you, Caliver. I'll synchronize my clocks.

  • caliber
    caliber

    An international storm is brewing over whether to abolish the leap second, one of which is due to be added to clocks at the end of the year.

    Astronomers are alarmed at the proposal and say their clocks must be exactly synchronised with the Earth's rotation. But others say getting rid of leap seconds will make the world a safer place.
    Astronomers says getting rid of leap seconds would make it hard for them to train their telescopes on distant stars and could cause problems for navigation and surveying.But some argue having to insert the occasional leap second into clocks can cause computer glitches and havoc in communications

    Because the Earth's rotation is relatively imprecise, GMT can be out by several thousandths of a second, and can be affected by tides, currents in the Earth's molten core, seasonal change or major tectonic movements.

    Irregularities can have implications for global positioning, high-speed computing, astronomers, security networks and electronic transaction time records.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    I vote for a timeless existence. Screw the computers and telescopes. Why can't we just enjoy a simple life? With hour glasses and sundiscs.

  • OnTheWayOut
    OnTheWayOut

    Yeah, I thought 2008 felt too long.

    Seriously though, I am going to tie this to JW stuff.
    You would think Jehovah, in his perfect ways, would have made everything
    precise and perfect. A slowing-down of the earth indicates that it ain't so.

    I won't get into how it might indicate radical differences for the earth in the
    future, way beyond our lives. Just knowing that it ain't perfect and precise
    is enough.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow
    I won't get into how it might indicate radical differences for the earth in the
    future, way beyond our lives. Just knowing that it ain't perfect and precise
    is enough.

    One piece of evidence to God not expecting perfection from his creation/creatures.

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