Just to add some background. UTC is Universal Time Coordinated. Universal Time is more genereal.
Disregarding timezones, we have UTC as a single point of reference. Predictably there is an adjustment every fourth year, except every 100th year, unless it is every 400th year. Also an adjustment is needed about every 4000 years or so, but that is not part of UTC so far. The problem is that this is not enough because earth wobbles unpredictably. So we have unpredictable leap seconds that are added or subtracted or left unchanged at predictable intervals based on short term observations. Leap seconds are relevant in some areas because the earth can move a fair bit in one second. This is where UT1 time comes in as one of several ways to accommodate the imprecision of UTC. Most computer systems opt to define time as a monotonically increasing offset in seconds and fractions of seconds since midnight, January 1st, 1970 as observed from Greenwich, London. This is also known as Unix Time. Unix Time maps cleanly to UTC time to the extent that Unix Time can be seen as a UTC representation. This avoids any abrupt jumps in time, or slowly accelerated time up to leap second changes. UT1 cannot be mapped cleanly from Unix Time because it needs an earth wobble table to perform the translation, and that table needs to be kept up to date (literally). However, even accounting for earths wobbling is not enough if you want to be really exact. In this case you cannot really tell the order of events any more: https://www.quantamagazine.org/quantum-mischief-rewrites-the-laws-of-cause-and-effect-20210311/ <https://www.quantamagazine.org/quantum-mischief-rewrites-the-laws-of-cause-and-effect-20210311/> Trivia: the Romans made the (to my knowledge) first recorded fence post error around year 1 by introducing leap years every 3 years instead of every 4 years. After about 30 years the error became apparent and was fixed. Mikkel > On 11 Mar 2021, at 23.48, Watson Ladd <[email protected]> wrote: > > Dear QUIC WG, > > First a moment of unforgivable pedantry. Universal time is > unfortunately not the right name for UTC, which is slightly different. > It could also mean UT1 or some other variations It's also not clear > what the future of computer timekeeping is and I know several places > don't synchronize to UTC internally. I think the best way to handle > this is to say something like "synchronized" and leave open as to > exactly how that is done. > > I agree with the comments that there are too many options and should > be fewer. Other then that I didn't see any problems but I'm probably > too sleepy right now to spot them. > > Sincerely, > Watson Ladd > -- > Astra mortemque praestare gradatim >
