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Leap Second This Year

ygslash writes "The IERS has announced today that, after seven years, there will once again be a leap second this year. On December 31, 2005, the time 12:59 will last for 61 seconds."

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  1. Re:Two questions by Mudd+Guy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, it's not calculable farther in advance. The Earth's rotation is inconsistent enough that leap seconds are sometimes needed, but the need can't be predicted more than about a year in advance [1]. In other words, there is noise in the Earth's rotation period of about 1 second per year. Atomic clocks are a lot better than this (good to ~50 ns per year [2]!!!), so it's pretty easy to detect the problem.

    Sorry, I can't help with the second question.

    [1] See this Wikipedia article.

    [2] See this Wikipedia figure.