Dear Brian,

[email protected] skrev:
From: Rob Seaman <[email protected]>
...
Like I keep saying, the mean solar day is trivial to compute from the sidereal day. Look at it this way, there are "really" 366.25 days per year. That extra day just gets sliced and diced among all the others.

Nice, now we have extra days!

A "leap year" is every four years except every one hundred years except every four 
hundred years.  Put another way, if Y is the number of the year then Y is a leap year if:  
(Y%4==0)&&((Y%100!=0)||(Y%400==0)) where that's the modulus operator, of course.  In a 
four-hundred year cycle, that's 24 leap years per century except the start of the century (minus 
one), and then one leap year at the start of the millenium (minus one).

That's 303*365+97*366=146097 days for an average of 365.2425 days per year.  
Woo!

I guess being on break for two weeks means I haven't gotten my fill of teaching 
arithmetic.

I think you have mixed up your solar days with sidereal days. The sidereal day is the time it takes the earth to turn 360 degrees, and to measure that one often uses a fix-star as reference. A sidereal day is is about 23 hours and 56 minutes long. A solar day is the time it takes for the earth to turn until the sun is at the same place in the sky (i.e. using the sun as the fix-star). These are not the same thing since we have a significant movement around the sun where as a more distant fix-star has a much less angular distorsion.

Your arthmetic describes solar days, but fails to describe the sidereal days.

The side-real day is important. The GPS satellite orbits is 11 hour and 58 minutes long, so that their orbit around the world causes a near perfect re-tracing over the world.

So yes, we have an extra day, but since the earth turns in the direction is does the solar day count is one less.

Cheers,
Magnus
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