[LEAPSECS] but what does Daniel Gambis say?

Rob Seaman seaman at noao.edu
Thu Aug 28 16:21:10 EDT 2008



> Serbian Astronomical Journal, including mention of negative leap

> seconds

>

> http://arXiv.org/pdf/0808.3612


Timekeeping is one of those narrow disciplines where peer review
implies small number statistics. So this paper joins others of
suspect validity such as:

Deines & Williams (2007, AJ, 134, 64) "Time Dialation and the Length
of the Second: Why Timescales Diverge"

That said, it doesn't appear to be devoid of content - simply rather
"lazy". I'm particularly taken with statements like "all the physical
factors unambiguously recognized till nowadays cannot cause such a
phenomenon". Most journal editors and referees would have a hard time
accepting a paper with such a conclusion. Rather, the authors'
curiosity should have driven them to further investigation of one sort
or another. Either tie the results to the current physical basis of
the field, or acquire data sufficient to call current physical
understanding into question.

One is left wondering how this paper came to be written. PHK's
supposition about undergrads sounds about right. Some of the choice
of wording seems to imply that the authors are directly or indirectly
aware of discussions from this mailing list. The title suggests an
interest in abetting the ITU-R's agenda. The shallow analysis (and
obscure journal) should make this all rather moot. I am pleased,
however, to see some attempt at predicting Earth orientation, but this
surely cannot represent the state of the attainable art :-)

I can't add much to the previous comments that a fit with so many
degrees of freedom is immediately suspect for purposes of
extrapolation. It is unremarkable that they were able to track every
tiny wiggle in the data. FIgure 4 is quite humorous.

Modeling delta-T, a cumulative effect, doesn't seem very expressive in
general - all the empirical insight was smoothed out of the data
before they started. Rather, it would be better to focus on LOD or
other more direct indicators of Earth orientation or rotation rate.
Integrate the models to recover UT1, etc., as a separate step. A fit
without residuals is like signal with no noise - begging for skepticism.

One could seek physical explanations for the more (statistically)
significant harmonic terms. For example, the 22 year period is twice
the solar cycle and there could be coupling with the magnetic field
reversals. A few of the terms in this (apparently) unconstrained fit
pop out near annual, fractional annual, and multi-annual periods.
Probably not a coincidence. The solar system is rife with harmonic
resonances of various sorts. Surely the Earth rotation community must
have considered a number of such phenomena previously given that lunar
tidal locking is recognized as the principal driver for Earth's
rotational slowing?

On the other hand, understanding the short period seasonal effects on
LOD (all those beautiful wiggles from the plots on Steve Allen's web
site, for instance) benefits simply from coverage over many cycles.
It has taken a century or two to figure out the solar cycle due to its
long period. Long term LOD phenomena will take similarly long to sort
out. A comparative study with LOD data from the other planets and
satellites could be revealing. (One suspects the available data
aren't sufficiently precise for the other planets. Sounds like a good
argument to send astronomers to Mars :-)

The 222 year period is most likely a meaningless artifact of the
data. The long term trend of tidal slowing is going to pop out as the
most significant term. The corresponding period is truncated by the
truncated horizon of the available data.

Would prefer to see a similar fit with fewer terms and more
constraints. How about forcing terms with periods of a lunar month, a
solar year, etc? In addition to the free harmonic terms, how about an
explicit linear trend forcing the long term tidal slowing? How about
forcing the millennial term from http://www.ucolick.org/~sla/leapsecs/ancient.pdf?
How about estimating the magnitude of the coupling between the
terrestrial magnetic field and the solar magnetic field? Could this
possibly transfer enough angular momentum to affect the Earth's
rotation?

This particular paper is only worth attention due to the dearth of
similar papers.

Rob Seaman
NOAO
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