The so-called
International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service
charged with ensuring that earth time keeps pace with time
measured by super-accurate atomic clocks ruled earlier this year
that a tiny pause was needed to account for a gradual
slowing-down in the earth's rotation.
The change, which will allow earth time to catch up with atomic
time, will now take effect on Tuesday at the stroke of midnight
Greenwich Mean Time, also known as UTC (coordinated universal
time) in French.
"Very exceptionally, the minute ... will last one second longer
than normal, that is, 61 seconds instead of 60," the Paris
Observatory, which houses the international time service, said
in a statement.
That literally gives Athens an extra second to either come to
agreement with creditors over a cash-for-reform package that has
already been five months in discussion, or otherwise find 1.6
billion euros owing to the International Monetary Fund.
"Yes, but one second isn't much time," Sebastien Bize, joint
director of the Observatory's Space Time Reference Systems
(SYRTE) arm, told Reuters TV. "And unfortunately, we can't add
more than one second."
(Reporting by Lucien Libert; writing by Mark John)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|