Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Clocks could skip second as Earth’s rotation shifts: study

- ISTANBUL / AA DESIGNER MUSTAFA ARSLAN

A RECENT study in the Nature Journal indicates that due to factors like climate change and geological shifts, Earth’s changing rotation may prompt clocks to skip a second, potentiall­y necessitat­ing a “negative leap second” around 2029.

The study warns that such changes in Earth’s rotation may necessitat­e adjustment­s in Coordinate­d Universal Time (UTC), a standard used to set all time zones around the world earlier than originally planned.

The implicatio­ns of this adjustment extend beyond timekeepin­g, as it could pose an “unpreceden­ted problem for computer network timing.”

The Earth’s rotation, typically 24 hours, is now fluctuatin­g, prompting adjustment­s in leap seconds to align atomic and astronomic­al time.

Between 1972 and 2016, 27 leap seconds were added to compensate for the Earth’s slowing rotation. But the rate of slowing was tapering off to the point that the Earth’s rotation was actually speeding up.

However, recent observatio­ns suggest that this is being offset due to the rapid melting of ice at the poles since 1990. Melting ice shifts Earth’s mass from the poles to the bulging center, which slows the rotation

In response, timekeeper­s are planning revisions to leap second standards in the 2030s

to minimize frequent adjustment­s and maintain synchroniz­ation across various timekeepin­g systems.

Geological and climatic factors, including oceanic tides and melting polar ice, affect Earth’s rotation, delaying the need for leapsecond adjustment­s.

The accelerate­d melting of polar ice, a consequenc­e of human-induced climate change, is redistribu­ting Earth’s mass and slowing its rotation.

The study noted that “if polar ice melting had not recently accelerate­d, this problem would have occurred three years earlier.”

This phenomenon is “already affecting global timekeepin­g,” indicating the tangible impact of climate change on Earth’s rotational dynamics.

Despite a natural rotation increase, melting ice has delayed the need for a leap-second adjustment from 2026 to around 2029.

This delay in the need for leap-second adjustment­s underscore­s the complex relationsh­ip between environmen­tal changes and Earth’s timekeepin­g systems.

Timekeeper­s aim to phase out leap-second adjustment­s by 2035 to adapt to Earth’s changing dynamics and maintain precision in timekeepin­g amid natural and human-induced changes.

 ?? ?? Earth’s shifting rotation may lead to clocks skipping a second, according to a recent study.
Earth’s shifting rotation may lead to clocks skipping a second, according to a recent study.

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