[LEAPSECS] Leap smear

Michael Deckers michael.deckers at yahoo.com
Sat Sep 24 16:46:23 EDT 2011



On 2011-09-20 17:08, Steve Allen wrote:


> At the CCIR Plenary Assembly in 1978 when CCIR Rec. 460-2 were

> published the supporting documentation literally rejoices at the 1975

> CGPM resolution which says that UTC is mean solar time.


Interesting. Did they really think the CGPM said that
"UTC is mean solar time"?

Of course, the CGPM never said that. They "considered" in 1975
that the "system called 'Coordinated Universal Time' (UTC)"
-- they did not call UTC a time scale -- "makes available
to the users"
"an approximation to Universal Time (or,
if one prefers, mean solar time)".

Note that the definitive French version is unambiguous; in
French the quote reads:
"une approximation du Temps universel (ou,
si l’on préfère, du temps solaire moyen)"
implying an "approximation .. to mean solar time".

This statement of CGPM is just a conjunction of two statements,
which were true at the time:
- UTC is approximation of UT1
- UT1 could be considered as mean solar time.

The first statement remains true even with the proposed
redefinition of UTC (just with a worse approximation than the
one used in 1975). The second statement may not be true with
the current definition of UT1, simply because no mean sun has
been defined for the current UT1.

If one prefers to call the current version of UT1 a mean solar
time then this is only justified as far as UT1 has agreed in
phase and rate until 2003 with the mean solar time as defined
in 1978 and before.

The current UT1 is better called Earth rotation time. It is
well-known that the "non-rotating origins" of UT1 rotate and
thus the current UT1 differs secularly from mean solar
time. The current definition of UT1 makes it not only
dependent on the attitude of the Earth in space, and on
(a bounded function of) the position in its orbit, but also
on the past movements of the pole of rotation, on which
mean solar time in any reasonable definition does not depend.

But then -- UT1 will certainly be redefined, at the latest
when the increased accuracy of its determination makes the
"non-rotating origins" impracticable. It might even become
mean solar time again.

Michael Deckers.


More information about the LEAPSECS mailing list