The threads are coming fast and furious.  Cutting to the chase.

If the precision timekeeping establishment falters in its role of delivering a useful representation of mean solar time, clearly some other community will have to pick up the slack. It is likely not helpful to bring the Goddess into it, but I personally spurn no support offered.

The heart of civil timekeeping is the dynamic tension between the two definitions of the "second":

        - as 1/86400 of a mean solar day, and
        - as the SI unit of time

If this distinction had been made crystal clear in the beginning, we wouldn't be having this discussion now.

Recall the historical idea of calling the SI unit the "essen". What if, in addition, the essen had a duration of a size that could not be confused with the fractional part of the day? For example, what if the essen had been chosen such that the acceleration due to gravity was a convenient 1.0 meters per essen-squared. So:

        1.0 m/essen^2 = 9.8 m/s^2

        1.0 second = 3.13 essen, and
        1.0 essen = 0.319 second

In this case (or pick some other physically significant value), there never would have been the confusion about counting essens using sexigesimal notation. In particular, a meaningless tally of 86400 essens would have wrapped around 3+ times per day. And the definition of a day - that is, an actual mean solar day - would remain clear.

In short, the distinction between the role of the second and the role of the essen in timekeeping architecture would remain obvious.

This design pattern can be used to distinguish technically viable solutions - like UTC with leap seconds, and Steve's expression of TI - from technically nonviable solutions like a so-called "UTC" without leap seconds. The role of political expediency in the decision-making would be clear. I won't say expediency still wouldn't triumph over technical common sense, but that fact would be clear to all.

And that is, pretty close, the proposal in WP7A, except they mention the "leap-hours" as a silly figleaf to the astronomers and other die- hard sun-in-the-south-at-noon (mostly religious) addicts.


Let me - yet again - emphasize that people with diametrically opposed notions of timekeeping all regard the leap hour as an absurd notion.

come up with a workable proposal, canvas it for the right people, repeat until done.

This group is one place the canvas is taking place. Part of making a proposal workable is pointing out the unworkable proposals, especially if the unworkable ones are receiving undue (and unwise) political support.

At any rate, glad to see that you agree that the process should focus on characterizing the workability of coherently expressed and properly communicated proposals. That's pretty much what I've been saying for eight years. It is also simply the definition of a trade-off study. I especially like that you focus on this as an iterative process.

Rob Seaman
National Optical Astronomy Observatory

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