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June 30 has one more second added onto time
KARACHI: On Saturday, June 30, the day will have a leap second tacked onto the day. In keeping up with the Coordinated Universal Time, 61 seconds instead of 60 will be added at the end of the day on Saturday.
A leap second needs to be added on because tides are causing a braking action on the earth at 1.4 milliseconds per day per century, Cnet reports. By making the last minute of June 30 an extra second longer, it's our way of keeping our atomic clocks in line. This has been calculated by the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington D.C.
The last leap second adjustment was in 2008.
It's a way of maintaining time with the continuous rotation of the earth. IBN Live reports that if no adjustments to time were made every so often over several years time, the sun would actually set at midday. Tides are another factor that determined when leap seconds should be adjusted for. It has the same purpose as adding an extra day in a leap year.
KARACHI: On Saturday, June 30, the day will have a leap second tacked onto the day. In keeping up with the Coordinated Universal Time, 61 seconds instead of 60 will be added at the end of the day on Saturday.
A leap second needs to be added on because tides are causing a braking action on the earth at 1.4 milliseconds per day per century, Cnet reports. By making the last minute of June 30 an extra second longer, it's our way of keeping our atomic clocks in line. This has been calculated by the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington D.C.
The last leap second adjustment was in 2008.
It's a way of maintaining time with the continuous rotation of the earth. IBN Live reports that if no adjustments to time were made every so often over several years time, the sun would actually set at midday. Tides are another factor that determined when leap seconds should be adjusted for. It has the same purpose as adding an extra day in a leap year.