On Jan 14, 2014, at 3:48 AM, Poul-Henning Kamp <[email protected]> wrote:

> In message <[email protected]>, Zefram writes:
> 
>> It's dubious to say that they meant UTC if they weren't aware of
>> leap seconds.  As that's the defining feature of UTC [...]
> 
> No.
> 
> The defining feature of UTC is the bit they put in the name:  Coordinated.

There's also the other two parts of the name, Universal Time:

        "The terms Greenwich Civil Time (G.C.T.), Weltzeit (W.Z.) and Universal 
Time (U.T.)  indicate time computed from Greenwich mean midnight without 
ambiguity."  (http://iau.org/static/resolutions/IAU1928_French.pdf)

UTC is subclassed from UT.  Leap seconds are necessary for that to be true. 
Coordination is a specific characteristic, but UT is the general class.


> To everybody else but the scientists who tickled the atomic clocks,
> leap seconds was an academic detail of no consequence.

Technology, standards and protocols are often esoteric and ticklish in their 
details.  That does not imply they are of no consequence to non-academics.  
Leap seconds are a means to an end.

It is a simple fact that "day" means "synodic day" on Earth and a couple of 
dozen other large terrestrial worlds in the solar system.  This ties UTC to 
Greenwich mean midnight.  A timescale that omits that connection should not be 
denoted Universal Time of any kind, coordinated or not.

Rob

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