Home > Science Fact Finder > Time, Weights, and Measures - What Is A Leap Second?
Time, Weights, and Measures - What Is A Leap Second?
What is a leap second?
A leap second is a second that is added to a specified day, to keep the calendar in close alignment with international atomic time. (Atomic time is based on the extremely regular vibrations that occur within atoms.) The reason why leap seconds are periodically needed is that the Earth's rotation is very gradually slowing down. One leap second was inserted on June 30, 1992. It was accomplished as follows: 23 hours 59 minutes 59 seconds universal time was followed by 23 hours 59 minutes 60 seconds. This, in turn, was followed by 0 hours 0 minutes 0 seconds on July 1.
Source: Astronomy, vol. 20 (June 1992), pp. 24, 26.
[The entire page is 113 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
-
Time
- How is time measured?
- What is meant by Universal Time?
- How many time zones are there in the world?
- Who establishes the correct time in the United States?
- What is military time?
- What do the initials a.m. and p.m. mean?
- When is Daylight Savings Time observed in the United States?
- What is a leap second?
- What is the exact length of a calendar year?
- Where did the term "grandfather clock" come from?
- What were the longest and shortest years on record?
- Besides the Julian and Gregorian calendars, what other calendars have been used?
- When does leap year occur?
- When did January 1 become the first day of the new year?
- How were the months of the year named?
- Where do the names of the days of the week come from?
- Why are the lengths of the seasons not equal?
-
Weights And Measures
- What is the metric system of measurement?
- What are the U.S. and metric units of measurement for area?
- How did the yard as a unit of measurement originate?
- What is a bench mark?
- How was the length of a meter originally determined?
- How are U.S. customary measures converted to metric measures and vice versa?
- What is the difference between a short ton, a long ton, and a metric ton?
- Why is a nautical mile different from a statute mile?
- What are the equivalents for dry and liquid measures?
- What are U.S. and British measures for volume and weight of water?
