Sitting in a plenary session - will keep this short.

Executive summary: GPS is great stuff. Universal Time is also great stuff. They are not the same great stuff.

M. Warner Losh wrote:

Everybody that implements leap seconds in time keeping will automatically be correct if they were eliminated.

This has not been demonstrated to be correct. Some systems care about mean solar time. You are asserting that A) astronomers don't matter, and B) no other systems in the world care about Earth orientation to a degree we need be concerned about.

It would still work if leap seconds were scheduled out more than 6 months in advance too.

No argument there!  By all means increase the announcement horizon.

Most people live their lives where the sun has an apparent error of tens or hundreds of minutes off.

I'll make my usual observation that this confuses periodic and secular effects. See list archive.

We're also putting off the problem. Given the quadratic acceleration of drift, one day we'll have to have a better system is synchronization to the earth's rotation is to remain viable.

The quadratic behavior applies no matter what. Embargoing leap seconds does not make them go away. Unless we believe night can turn into day, civil time must be synched to the Earth's rotation to match some constraints. By all means let's debate the constraints. It is not viable, however, to simply ignore the sun in the sky. As the Earth clock slows (albeit thousands of years from now), it will become obvious that we can't pretend atomic time and solar time are the same thing. Why not admit this fact of life now?

The way to reach a robust consensus on what constitutes a "better system" is to discover and debate the underlying requirements of the system. Define the problem appropriately and the range of acceptable solutions will take care of itself.

Rob

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