The Earth completed its usual 24-hour rotation in 1.59 milliseconds on June 29, breaking the record for the shortest day in modern history. (NASA)
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Atlanta – If you feel like there’s less time in the day, you’re right.
Scientists have recorded the shortest day on Earth since the invention of the atomic clock.
to me Department of Earth Rotation Systems and International ReferencesOrganization responsible for maintaining world time.
Rotation is the time it takes the Earth to rotate once on its axis, which is about 86,400 seconds.
The previous record was documented on July 19, 2020, when the day’s measurement was 1.47 milliseconds shorter than usual.
The atomic clock is a standard unit of measurement that has been used since the 1950s to determine time and measure the Earth’s rotation, said Dennis McCarthy, retired time director at the US Naval Observatory.
He said that while June 29 broke the record for the shortest day in modern history, there were much shorter days on Earth.
When dinosaurs were still roaming the planet 70 million years ago, a day on Earth lasted about 23 and a half hours, according to a 2020 study published in paleobiology and paleoclimatology.
Since 1820, scientists have documented the slowing down of the Earth’s rotation. According to NASA. In recent years, McCarthy said, it has started to accelerate.
Why increase speed?
McCarthy said researchers don’t have a definitive answer as to how or why the Earth is spinning a little faster, but it could be due to adaptation to glacial equilibrium or Earth’s motion due to melting glaciers.
He said that the Earth is a little wider than its height, making it an oblate spheroid. Polar glaciers weigh heavily on the crust at the North and South poles, McCarthy said.
He said that because the poles are melting due to the climate crisis, there is less pressure on the top and bottom of the planet, moving the crust up and making the Earth round. The circular shape helps the planet spin faster, McCarthy said.
It’s the same phenomenon that snowboarders use to increase and decrease their speed, he said.
He said that when skaters extend their arms away from their bodies as they spin, it takes more force to spin. McCarthy said that when they place their arms close to their bodies, their speed increases because their body mass is closer to the center of gravity.
He said that when the Earth rotates, its mass approaches its center, which increases the speed of its rotation.
Our daily existence doesn’t even recognize that millisecond.
Dennis McCarthy, retired director of the US Naval Observatory
McCarthy said some have suggested a relationship with Bob Chandler. The axis around which our planet rotates does not align with the axis of symmetry, an invisible vertical line that divides the Earth into two equal halves.
This creates a slight oscillation in the Earth’s rotation, similar to the way a soccer ball vibrates when thrown, he said.
He said that when a soccer player is thrown, it sways slightly as it spins, because it doesn’t usually rotate around the axis of symmetry.
“If you’re a good soccer runner, you align the axis of rotation with the axis of symmetry in the soccer ball and you don’t swing,” McCarthy said.
However, McCarthy said that Chandler’s oscillation probably does not affect the speed of Earth’s rotation because the oscillation is due to the shape of the planet. He said that if the shape of the planet changes, then the frequency of its vibration changes, not the frequency of its rotation.
Removing the leap second
McCarthy said that since researchers began measuring the Earth’s rotation using atomic clocks, the Earth has been slowing down.
“Our daily existence doesn’t even acknowledge the millisecond,” McCarthy said. “But if these things come together, it can change the rate at which we enter a leap second.”
In cases where milliseconds accumulate over time, he said, the scientific community has added a second to the clock to slow our time to match Earth time. 27 leap seconds have been added since 1972, According to EarthSky.
Because the Earth is now spinning faster, McCarthy said, a leap second must be taken to keep up with our timing as the Earth’s rotation speed increases.
If the planet continues in this rotational trend, he said, a second leap is unlikely for another three to four years.
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