On 2020-02-01 23:59, Steve Allen wrote:
In every instance where a document specified a maximum deviation that agreement was later violated.
The maximum deviation |UTC - UT1| <= 0.9 s as stipulated in 1974 by CCIR Rec. 460-1 has never been violated until now.
In one case it was broken specifically because a high official at CCIR conceded to a high official from USSR and directed the BIH to violate fthe wording of the existing agreement.
Do you mean the only violation of applicable CCIR rules, the introduction of a leap second into UTC at 1973-01-01? If so -- this was the choice of using either the date 1973-01-01 for the insertion of the leap second, or a later date before 1973-07-01. This is evident because at the time, the mean excess length of day LOD = d(TAI - UT1)/d(UT1) was observed to be >= 3 ms/d, which is more than 0.5 s per 6 months. Hence the choice was to either stick with the bound 0.7 s for |UT1 - UTC| as required by CCIR Report 517 of 1971, or else stick with the primary choices for the possible dates of the insertion of leap seconds. Apparently, the "high official from USSR" must have preferred the latter. Michael Deckers. _______________________________________________ LEAPSECS mailing list [email protected] https://pairlist6.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/leapsecs
