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DoomYoshi wrote:So you'd rather follow the formula than have the date be correct?
jusplay4fun wrote:The date will be correct, IF you follow the "formula"
JPDoomYoshi wrote:So you'd rather follow the formula than have the date be correct?
DoomYoshi wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:The date will be correct, IF you follow the "formula"
JPDoomYoshi wrote:So you'd rather follow the formula than have the date be correct?
Ok, so formulas are infallible. That is good to know.
But seriously the formula is off by 27 seconds per year, and that 27 seconds will catch up to us after 2800. If it wasn't a leap year we'd have a long way to go before anyone had to worry.
I knew this would get a lot of backlash, which is why I'm starting now.
DoomYoshi wrote:A leap second is for something different though. Those are for keeping the atomic clocks lined up with real clocks as the earth can slow down in its rotations.
It's not 27 seconds off in 782 years. It's 27 seconds off per year. (when comparing the formula from the Gregorian calendar to the Tropical year, which may not be your preferred definition of a year). This is due to the formula in calculating leap years.
jusplay4fun wrote:You were unclear about what the 27 seconds was about. I made an assumption and asked for clarification.
I think your 27 seconds per year refers to the difference between the solar day and the sidereal day.
DoomYoshi wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:You were unclear about what the 27 seconds was about. I made an assumption and asked for clarification.
I think your 27 seconds per year refers to the difference between the solar day and the sidereal day.
No, it's the difference between a tropical year and the year as calculated by Gregorian calendar.
A Gregorian year is 365 + leap year every 4 years (.25) - leap year every 100 years (-.01) + leap year every 400 years (.0025) for a total of 365.2425 days.
A tropical year is 365.24219 (this is an average!). This is a difference of .00006 which is actually just over 5 seconds, so my math was off earlier.
A sidereal year is actually longer than the Gregorian year, but less important since the relation to the sun determines our seasons, not our relationship to any fixed point outside our solar system.
Today's Gregorian calendar uses more elaborate leap year rules, making it far more accurate. However, it is not perfect either. Compared to the tropical year, it is 27 seconds too long, so it is off by 1 day every 3236 years.
DoomYoshi wrote:Well, timeanddate.com says 27 seconds but I calculated myself at 5 seconds.
https://www.timeanddate.com/date/perfect-calendar.htmlToday's Gregorian calendar uses more elaborate leap year rules, making it far more accurate. However, it is not perfect either. Compared to the tropical year, it is 27 seconds too long, so it is off by 1 day every 3236 years.
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