We might not see leap seconds after 2035 🤯
This is the best article about the 2022 vote to abolish the leap second I've seen so far. Unlike the articles on pop-science magazines, it's clear it's written by a time nerd who knows what he's talking about and goes into the details and subtleties of the process.
First, the author, Randy Au, covers the difference between UTC, UT1, and TAI. I mentioned this in a previous post, but the summary is this:
The length of UT1 seconds comes from rotation of the earth.
The length of TAI seconds follows the SI definition.
UTC seconds are the same length as TAI seconds, but leap seconds are added.
Apparently, UTC was developed as a "compromise" between the other two systems.
The article then goes on to quote the actual wording of CGPM's Resolution 4, and it seems I was mistaken about the outcome being to abolish the leap second by 2035 "or later." In fact, the resolution says:
CGPM [...] decides that the maximum value for the difference (UT1-UTC) will be increased in, or before, 2035,
requests that the CIPM [...] propose a new maximum value for the difference (UT1-UTC) that will ensure the continuity of UTC for at least a century,
So actually, the plan is to replace (the current system of adding) leap seconds (i.e. adding one every time the difference UT1-UTC exceeds 0.9 seconds) in or before 2035, not after.
Randy Au then goes on to say that, even though CGPM hasn't decided yet what the difference will be increased to, people believe that the ultimate goal is to have UTC be based on the SI second while also, somehow, remaining continuous. This seems borderline paradoxical, and the solution may involve previously unseen temporal anomalies such as UTC seconds or longer periods of time running half as fast or following leap smears. This is a take I haven't heard before, but it may have been made obsolete by 2023's discussion on leap minutes.
Randy Au then goes on to talk about the 2023 ITU conference (which the article was written one year before), and has the pessimistic view that the ITU will likely affirm the CGPM's vote. He quotes the New York Times:
Felicitas Arias, the former director of the time department at the B.I.P.M. and now a visiting astronomer at the Paris Observatory, said that negotiations between the two organizations convinced her that the I.T.U. will support the Versailles vote.
Maybe three days after the first pandigital minute (June 27, 2034 at 6:59 PM) will be the last leap second in history.














