Earth Broke the Record for the Shortest Day Since Atomic Clocks Were Invented

Earth Broke the Record for the Shortest Day Since Atomic Clocks Were Invented
Earth completed its normal 24-hour rotation 1.59 milliseconds fast on June 29, breaking the record for the shortest day in modern history. (Courtesy of NASA)

If you feel like there’s less time in the day, you’re correct.

Scientists recorded the shortest day on Earth since the invention of the atomic clock.

Our planet’s rotation measured in at 1.59 milliseconds short of the normal 24-hour day on June 29, according to the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, an organization in charge of global timekeeping.

A rotation is the length of time the Earth takes to spin once on its axis, which is roughly 86,400 seconds.

The previous record was documented on July 19, 2020, when the day measured 1.47 milliseconds shorter than normal.

The atomic clock is a standardized unit of measurement that has been used since the 1950s to tell time and measure the Earth’s rotation, said Dennis McCarthy, retired director of time at the US Naval Observatory.

Despite June 29 breaking a record for the shortest day in modern history, there have been much shorter days on Earth, he said.

When dinosaurs still roamed the planet 70 million years ago, a single day on Earth lasted about 23 1/2 hours, according to a 2020 study published in Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology.

Since 1820, scientists documented Earth’s rotation slowing down, according to NASA. In the past few years, it began speeding up, McCarthy said.

Why is the Speed Increasing?

As Earth becomes rounder, its mass becomes closer to its center, which increases its rotational speed, he said.

Some have suggested a correlation with the Chandler wobble, McCarthy said. The axis our planet rotates on is not lined up with its axis of symmetry, an invisible vertical line that divides the Earth into two equal halves.

This creates a slight wobble as the Earth rotates, similar to how a football wobbles when it is thrown, he said.

When a player tosses a football, it wobbles slightly as it rotates since it often doesn’t spin around the axis of symmetry, he said.

“If you’re a really good passer in football, you line up the axis of rotation with the axis of symmetry of the football, and it doesn’t wobble,” McCarthy said.

Removing a Leap Second

Since researchers began measuring the Earth’s rotational speed using atomic clocks, Earth had been slowing down its rotational speed, McCarthy said.

“Our day-to-day existence doesn’t even recognize that millisecond,” McCarthy said. “But if these things add up, then it could change the rate at which we insert a leap second.”

In the instances when the milliseconds build up over time, the scientific community has added a leap second to the clock to slow down our time to match Earth’s, he said. There have been 27 leap seconds added since 1972, according to EarthSky.

Because Earth is now rotating faster, a leap second would need to be taken away to catch our timekeeping up with Earth’s increasing rotational speed, McCarthy said.

If the planet continues this rotational trend, the removal of a leap second likely wouldn’t need to happen for another three to four years, he said.

The-CNN-Wire
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