▲ | doph 3 days ago | |||||||||||||
>it's been about 100 years so now each day is 2.3 milliseconds longer >after 1000 days 1000 * 2.3 milliseconds = 2.3 seconds I don't think the example helps at all to explain the concept, but I think the math is right | ||||||||||||||
▲ | lifeisstillgood 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
So, if my maths is right that’s about 1 second extra slower every 500 days, which means a day will take 48 hours in about 43 million years That seems very very fast on galactic time scales - we would get tidally locked (rotate at speed of orbit?) in about 150x43 million … oh about 3 billion years … yeah never mind Edit A slightly different way of looking at it is we add a leap second every 2 or so years on average (27 in past 53 years). This seems about right with the above maths - it just amazes me What amazes me more is they are going to stop using leap seconds https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_second by 2035 | ||||||||||||||
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