http://abcnews.go.com/wire/US/ap20031230_1690.html

In a phenomenon that has scientists puzzled, the Earth is right on
schedule for a fifth straight year.
Experts agree that the rate at which the Earth travels through space
has slowed ever so slightly for millennia. To make the world's
official time agree with where the Earth actually is in space,
scientists in 1972 started adding an extra "leap second" on the last
day of the year.

For 28 years, scientists repeated the procedure. But in 1999, they
discovered the Earth was no longer lagging behind.

At the National Institute for Science and Technology in Boulder,
spokesman Fred McGehan said most scientists agree the Earth's orbit
around the sun has been gradually slowing for millennia. But he said
they don't have a good explanation for why it's suddenly on schedule.

Possible explanations include the tides, weather and changes in the
Earth's core, he said.

The leap second was an unexpected consequence of the 1955 invention of
the atomic clock, which use the electromagnetic radiation emanated by
Cesium atoms to measure time. It is extremely reliable.

Atomic-based Coordinated Universal Time was implemented in 1972,
superseding the astronomically determined Greenwich Mean Time.

Leap seconds can be a big deal, affecting everything from
communication, navigation and air traffic control systems to the
computers that link global financial markets.




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