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Ephemeris time

The term ephemeris time (often abbreviated ET) can in principle refer to time in association with any ephemeris (itinerary of the trajectory of an astronomical object). In practice it has been used more specifically to refer to:

  1. a former standard astronomical time scale adopted in 1952 by the IAU,[1] and superseded during the 1970s.[2] This time scale was proposed in 1948, to overcome the disadvantages of irregularly fluctuating mean solar time. The intent was to define a uniform time (as far as was then feasible) based on Newtonian theory (see below: Definition of ephemeris time (1952)). Ephemeris time was a first application of the concept of a dynamical time scale, in which the time and time scale are defined implicitly, inferred from the observed position of an astronomical object via the dynamical theory of its motion.[3]
  2. a modern relativistic coordinate time scale, implemented by the JPL ephemeris time argument Teph, in a series of numerically integrated Development Ephemerides. Among them is the DE405 ephemeris in widespread current use. The time scale represented by Teph is closely related to, but distinct (by an offset and constant rate) from, the TCB time scale currently adopted as a standard by the IAU (see below: JPL ephemeris time argument Teph).[4]

Most of the following sections relate to the ephemeris time of the 1952 standard.

An impression has sometimes arisen that ephemeris time was in use from 1900: this probably arose because ET, though proposed and adopted in the period 1948–1952, was defined in detail using formulae that made retrospective use of the epoch date of 1900 January 0 and of Newcomb's Tables of the Sun.[5][6]

The ephemeris time of the 1952 standard leaves a continuing legacy, through its ephemeris second which became closely duplicated in the length of the current standard SI second (see below: Redefinition of the second).

History (1952 standard)

Ephemeris time (ET), adopted as standard in 1952, was originally designed as an approach to a uniform time scale, to be freed from the effects of irregularity in the rotation of the Earth, "for the convenience of astronomers and other scientists", for example for use in ephemerides of the Sun (as observed from the Earth), the Moon, and the planets. It was proposed in 1948 by G M Clemence.[7]

From the time of John Flamsteed (1646–1719) it had been believed that the Earth's daily rotation was uniform. But in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with increasing precision of astronomical measurements, it began to be suspected, and was eventually established, that the rotation of the Earth (i.e. the length of the day) showed irregularities on short time scales, and was slowing down on longer time scales. The evidence was compiled by W de Sitter (1927)[8] who wrote "If we accept this hypothesis, then the 'astronomical time', given by the Earth's rotation, and used in all practical astronomical computations, differs from the 'uniform' or 'Newtonian' time, which is defined as the independent variable of the equations of celestial mechanics". De Sitter offered a correction to be applied to the mean solar time given by the Earth's rotation to get uniform time.

Other astronomers of the period also made suggestions for obtaining uniform time, including A Danjon (1929), who suggested in effect that observed positions of the Moon, Sun and planets, when compared with their well-established gravitational ephemerides, could better and more uniformly define and determine time.[9]

Thus the aim developed, to provide a new time scale for astronomical and scientific purposes, to avoid the unpredictable irregularities of the mean solar time scale, and to replace for these purposes Universal Time (UT) and any other time scale based on the rotation of the Earth around its axis, such as sidereal time.

The American astronomer G M Clemence (1948)[7] made a detailed proposal of this type based on the results of the English Astronomer Royal H Spencer Jones (1939).[10] Clemence (1948) made it clear that his proposal was intended "for the convenience of astronomers and other scientists only" and that it was "logical to continue the use of mean solar time for civil purposes".[11]

De Sitter and Clemence both referred to the proposal as 'Newtonian' or 'uniform' time. D Brouwer suggested the name 'ephemeris time'.[12]

Following this, an astronomical conference held in Paris in 1950 recommended "that in all cases where the mean solar second is unsatisfactory as a unit of time by reason of its variability, the unit adopted should be the sidereal year at 1900.0, that the time reckoned in this unit be designated ephemeris time", and gave Clemence's formula (see Definition of ephemeris time (1952)) for translating mean solar time to ephemeris time.

The International Astronomical Union approved this recommendation at its 1952 general assembly.[12][13] Practical introduction took some time (see Use of ephemeris time in official almanacs and ephemerides); ephemeris time (ET) remained a standard until superseded in the 1970s by further time scales (see Revision).

During the currency of ephemeris time as a standard, the details were revised a little. The unit was redefined in terms of the tropical year at 1900.0 instead of the sidereal year;[12] and the standard second was defined first as 1/31556925.975 of the tropical year at 1900.0,[12][14] and then as the slightly modified fraction 1/31556925.9747 instead,[15] finally being redefined in 1967/8 in terms of the cesium atomic clock standard (see below).

Although ET is no longer directly in use, it leaves a continuing legacy. Its successor time scales, such as TDT, as well as the atomic time scale IAT (TAI), were designed with a relationship that "provides continuity with ephemeris time".[16] ET was used for the calibration of atomic clocks in the 1950s.[17] Close equality between the ET second with the later SI second (as defined with reference to the cesium atomic clock) has been verified to within 1 part in 1010.[18]

In this way, decisions made by the original designers of ephemeris time influenced the length of today's standard SI second, and in turn, this has a continuing influence on the number of leap seconds which have been needed for insertion into current broadcast time scales, to keep them approximately in step with mean solar time.

Definition (1952)

Ephemeris time was defined in principle by the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun[12] (but its practical implementation was usually achieved in another way, see below). Its detailed definition was based on Simon Newcomb's Tables of the Sun (1895),[5] implemented in a new way to accommodate certain observed discrepancies:

In the introduction to Tables of the Sun, the basis of the tables (p. 9) includes a formula for the Sun's mean longitude at a time, indicated by interval T (in units of Julian centuries of 36525 mean solar days[19]), reckoned from Greenwich Mean Noon on 0 January 1900:

Ls = 279° 41' 48".04 + 129,602,768".13T +1".089T2 . . . . . (1)

Spencer Jones' work of 1939[10] showed that differences between the observed positions of the Sun and the predicted positions given by Newcomb's formula demonstrated the need for the following correction to the formula:

ΔLs = + 1".00 + 2".97T + 1".23T2 + 0.0748B

where "the times of observation are in Universal time, not corrected to Newtonian time," and 0.0748B represents an irregular fluctuation calculated from lunar observations.[20]

Thus, a conventionally corrected form of Newcomb's formula, incorporating the corrections on the basis of mean solar time, would be the sum of the two preceding expressions:

Ls = 279° 41' 49".04 + 129,602,771".10T +2".32T2 +0.0748B . . . . . (2)

Clemence's 1948 proposal, however, did not adopt such a correction of mean solar time. Instead, the same numbers were used as in Newcomb's original uncorrected formula (1), but now applied somewhat prescriptively, to define a new time and time scale implicitly, based on the real position of the Sun:

Ls = 279° 41' 48".04 + 129,602,768".13E +1".089E2 . . . . . (3)

With this reapplication, the time variable, now given as E, represents time in ephemeris centuries of 36525 ephemeris days of 86400 ephemeris seconds each. The 1961 official reference summarized the concept as such: "The origin and rate of ephemeris time are defined to make the Sun's mean longitude agree with Newcomb's expression"[21]

From the comparison of formulae (2) and (3), both of which express the same real solar motion in the same real time but defined on separate time scales, Clemence arrived at an explicit expression, estimating the difference in seconds of time between ephemeris time and mean solar time, in the sense (ET-UT):

  . . . . . (4)[20]

with the 24.349 seconds of time corresponding to the 1.00" in ΔLs. Clemence's formula (today superseded by more modern estimations) was included in the original conference decision on ephemeris time. In view of the fluctuation term, practical determination of the difference between ephemeris time and UT depended on observation. Inspection of the formulae above shows that the (ideally constant) units of ephemeris time have been, for the whole of the twentieth century, very slightly shorter than the corresponding (but not precisely constant) units of mean solar time (which, besides their irregular fluctuations, tend to lengthen gradually). This finding is consistent with the modern results of Morrison and Stephenson[22] (see article ΔT).

Implementations

Secondary realizations by lunar observations

Although ephemeris time was defined in principle by the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun,[23] it was usually measured in practice by the orbital motion of the Moon around the Earth.[24] These measurements can be considered as secondary realizations (in a metrological sense) of the primary definition of ET in terms of the solar motion, after a calibration of the mean motion of the Moon with respect to the mean motion of the Sun.[25]

Reasons for the use of lunar measurements were practically based: the Moon moves against the background of stars about 13 times as fast as the Sun's corresponding rate of motion, and the accuracy of time determinations from lunar measurements is correspondingly greater.

When ephemeris time was first adopted, time scales were still based on astronomical observation, as they always had been. The accuracy was limited by the accuracy of optical observation, and corrections of clocks and time signals were published in arrear.

Secondary realizations by atomic clocks

A few years later, with the invention of the cesium atomic clock, an alternative offered itself. Increasingly, after the calibration in 1958 of the cesium atomic clock by reference to ephemeris time,[17] cesium atomic clocks running on the basis of ephemeris seconds began to be used and kept in step with ephemeris time. The atomic clocks offered a further secondary realization of ET, on a quasi-real time basis[25] that soon proved to be more useful than the primary ET standard: not only more convenient, but also more precisely uniform than the primary standard itself. Such secondary realizations were used and described as 'ET', with an awareness that the time scales based on the atomic clocks were not identical to that defined by the primary ephemeris time standard, but rather, an improvement over it on account of their closer approximation to uniformity.[26] The atomic clocks gave rise to the atomic time scale, and to what was first called Terrestrial Dynamical Time and is now Terrestrial Time, defined to provide continuity with ET.[16]

The availability of atomic clocks, together with the increasing accuracy of astronomical observations (which meant that relativistic corrections were at least in the foreseeable future no longer going to be small enough to be neglected),[27] led to the eventual replacement of the ephemeris time standard by more refined time scales including terrestrial time and barycentric dynamical time, to which ET can be seen as an approximation.

Revision of time scales

In 1976, the IAU resolved that the theoretical basis for its then-current (since 1952) standard of Ephemeris Time was non-relativistic, and that therefore, beginning in 1984, Ephemeris Time would be replaced by two relativistic timescales intended to constitute dynamical timescales: Terrestrial Dynamical Time (TDT) and Barycentric Dynamical Time (TDB).[28] Difficulties were recognized, which led to these, in turn, being superseded in the 1990s by time scales Terrestrial Time (TT), Geocentric Coordinate Time GCT (TCG) and Barycentric Coordinate Time BCT (TCB).[16]

JPL ephemeris time argument Teph

High-precision ephemerides of sun, moon and planets were developed and calculated at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) over a long period, and the latest available were adopted for the ephemerides in the Astronomical Almanac starting in 1984. Although not an IAU standard, the ephemeris time argument Teph has been in use at that institution since the 1960s. The time scale represented by Teph has been characterized as a relativistic coordinate time that differs from Terrestrial Time only by small periodic terms with an amplitude not exceeding 2 milliseconds of time: it is linearly related to, but distinct (by an offset and constant rate which is of the order of 0.5 s/a) from the TCB time scale adopted in 1991 as a standard by the IAU. Thus for clocks on or near the geoid, Teph (within 2 milliseconds), but not so closely TCB, can be used as approximations to Terrestrial Time, and via the standard ephemerides Teph is in widespread use.[4]

Partly in acknowledgement of the widespread use of Teph via the JPL ephemerides, IAU resolution 3 of 2006[29] (re-)defined Barycentric Dynamical Time (TDB) as a current standard. As re-defined in 2006, TDB is a linear transformation of TCB. The same IAU resolution also stated (in note 4) that the "independent time argument of the JPL ephemeris DE405, which is called Teph" (here the IAU source cites[4]), "is for practical purposes the same as TDB defined in this Resolution". Thus the new TDB, like Teph, is essentially a more refined continuation of the older ephemeris time ET and (apart from the < 2 ms periodic fluctuations) has the same mean rate as that established for ET in the 1950s.

Use in official almanacs and ephemerides

Ephemeris time based on the standard adopted in 1952 was introduced into the Astronomical Ephemeris (UK) and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac, replacing UT in the main ephemerides in the issues for 1960 and after.[30] (But the ephemerides in the Nautical Almanac, by then a separate publication for the use of navigators, continued to be expressed in terms of UT.) The ephemerides continued on this basis through 1983 (with some changes due to adoption of improved values of astronomical constants), after which, for 1984 onwards, they adopted the JPL ephemerides.

Previous to the 1960 change, the 'Improved Lunar Ephemeris' had already been made available in terms of ephemeris time for the years 1952—1959[31] (computed by W J Eckert from Brown's theory with modifications recommended by Clemence (1948)).

Redefinition of the second

Successive definitions of the unit of ephemeris time are mentioned above (History). The value adopted for the 1956/1960 standard second:

the fraction 1/31 556 925.9747 of the tropical year for 1900 January 0 at 12 hours ephemeris time.

was obtained from the linear time-coefficient in Newcomb's expression for the solar mean longitude (above), taken and applied with the same meaning for the time as in formula (3) above. The relation with Newcomb's coefficient can be seen from:

1/31 556 925.9747 = 129 602 768.13 / (360×60×60×36 525×86 400).

Caesium atomic clocks became operational in 1955, and quickly confirmed the evidence that the rotation of the Earth fluctuated irregularly.[32] This confirmed the unsuitability of the mean solar second of Universal Time as a measure of time interval for the most precise purposes. After three years of comparisons with lunar observations, Markowitz et al. (1958) determined that the ephemeris second corresponded to 9 192 631 770 ± 20 cycles of the chosen cesium resonance.[17]

Following this, in 1967/68, the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) replaced the definition of the SI second by the following:

The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom.

Although this is an independent definition that does not refer to the older basis of ephemeris time, it uses the same quantity as the value of the ephemeris second measured by the cesium clock in 1958. This SI second referred to atomic time was later verified by Markowitz (1988) to be in agreement, within 1 part in 1010, with the second of ephemeris time as determined from lunar observations.[18]

For practical purposes the length of the ephemeris second can be taken as equal to the length of the second of Barycentric Dynamical Time (TDB) or Terrestrial Time (TT) or its predecessor TDT.

The difference between ET and UT is called ΔT; it changes irregularly, but the long-term trend is parabolic, decreasing from ancient times until the nineteenth century,[22] and increasing since then at a rate corresponding to an increase in the solar day length of 1.7 ms per century (see leap seconds).

International Atomic Time (TAI) was set equal to UT2 at 1 January 1958 0:00:00. At that time, ΔT was already about 32.18 seconds. The difference between Terrestrial Time (TT) (the successor to ephemeris time) and atomic time was later defined as follows:

1977 January 1.000 3725 TT = 1977 January 1.000 0000 TAI, i.e.
TT − TAI = 32.184 seconds

This difference may be assumed constant—the rates of TT and TAI are designed to be identical.

Notes and references

  1. ^ 'ESAE 1961': 'Explanatory Supplement (1961), esp. p. 9.
  2. ^ 'ESAA (1992)': P K Seidelmann (ed)., especially at pp. 41—42 and at p. 79.
  3. ^ B Guinot and P K Seidelmann (1988), at p. 304—5.
  4. ^ a b c E M Standish (1998).
  5. ^ a b S Newcomb (1895).
  6. ^ For the components of the definition including its retrospective aspect, see G M Clemence (1948), esp. p. 172, and 'ESAE 1961': 'Explanatory Supplement (1961), esp. pages 69 and 87.
  7. ^ a b G M Clemence (1948).
  8. ^ W de Sitter (1927).
  9. ^ G M Clemence (1971).
  10. ^ a b H Spencer Jones (1939).
  11. ^ Clemence (1948), at p. 171.
  12. ^ a b c d e ESAA (1992), see page 79.
  13. ^ At the IAU meeting in Rome 1952: see ESAE (1961) at sect.1C, p. 9; also Clemence (1971).
  14. ^ ESAA 1992, p. 79: citing decision of International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM), Sept 1954.
  15. ^ ESAA (1992), see page 80, citing CIPM recommendation Oct 1956, adopted 1960 by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM).
  16. ^ a b c ESAA (1992), at page 42.
  17. ^ a b c W Markowitz, R G Hall, L Essen, J V L Parry (1958)
  18. ^ a b Wm Markowitz (1988).
  19. ^ The unit of mean solar day is left implicit on p. 9 but made explicit on p. 20 of Newcomb (1895).
  20. ^ a b Clemence (1948), p. 172, following Spencer Jones (1939).
  21. ^ ESAE (1961) at p. 70.
  22. ^ a b L V Morrison & F R Stephenson (2004); also F R Stephenson, L V Morrison (1984), and F R Stephenson, L V Morrison (1995).
  23. ^ Clemence (1948), at pp. 171—3.
  24. ^ W Markowitz & others (1955); W Markowitz (1959); also W Markowitz, R G Hall, L Essen, J V L Parry (1958).
  25. ^ a b B Guinot & P K Seidelmann (1988), at p. 305.
  26. ^ W G Melbourne & others, 1968, section II.E.4-5, pages 15—16, including footnote 7, noted that the Jet Propulsion Laboratory spacecraft tracking and data reduction programs of that time (including the Single Precision Orbit Determination Program) used, as ET, the current US atomic clock time A.1 offset by 32.25 seconds. The discussion also noted that the usage was "inaccurate" (the quantity indicated was not identical with any of the other realizations of ET such as ET0, ET1), and that while A.1 gave "certainly a closer approximation to uniform time than ET1" there were no grounds for considering either the atomic clocks or any other measures of ET as (perfectly) uniform. Section II.F, pages 18—19, indicates that an improved time measure of (A.1 + 32.15 seconds), applied in the JPL Double Precision Orbit Determination Program, was also designated ET.
  27. ^ G M R Winkler and T C van Flandern (1977).
  28. ^ IAU resolutions (1976); see also ESAA (1992) at p. 41.
  29. ^ "IAU 2006 resolution 3" (PDF).
  30. ^ ESAA 1992, at p. 612.
  31. ^ "Improved Lunar Ephemeris", US Government Printing Office, 1954.
  32. ^ McCarthy & Seidelmann (2009) Ch. 4, "Variable Earth Rotation"

Bibliography

  • G M Clemence, "On the System of Astronomical Constants", Astronomical Journal, vol. 53(6) (1948), issue #1170, pp. 169–179.
  • G M Clemence (1971), "The Concept of Ephemeris Time", Journal for the History of Astronomy, vol. 2 (1971), pp. 73–79.
  • B Guinot and P K Seidelmann (1988), "Time scales – Their history, definition and interpretation", Astronomy and Astrophysics, vol. 194 (nos. 1–2) (April 1988), pp. 304–308.
  • 'ESAA (1992)': P K Seidelmann (ed.), "Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac", University Science Books, CA, 1992 ; ISBN 0-935702-68-7.
  • 'ESAE 1961': "Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Ephemeris and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac" ('prepared jointly by the Nautical Almanac Offices of the United Kingdom and the United States of America', HMSO, London, 1961).
  • IAU resolutions (1976): Resolutions adopted by the IAU in 1976 at Grenoble.
  • "Improved Lunar Ephemeris", US Government Printing Office, 1954.
  • W Markowitz, R G Hall, S Edelson (1955), "Ephemeris time from photographic positions of the moon", Astronomical Journal, vol. 60 (1955), p. 171.
  • W Markowitz, R G Hall, L Essen, J V L Parry (1958), "Frequency of cesium in terms of ephemeris time", Physical Review Letters, vol. 1 (1958), 105–107.
  • W Markowitz (1959), "Variations in the Rotation of the Earth, Results Obtained with the Dual-Rate Moon Camera and Photographic Zenith Tubes", Astronomical Journal, vol. 64 (1959), pp. 106–113.
  • Wm Markowitz (1988), "Comparisons of ET(Solar), ET(Lunar), UT and TDT", in A K Babcock & G A Wilkins (eds.), The Earth's Rotation and Reference Frames for Geodesy and Geophysics, IAU Symposia #128 (1988), pp. 413–418.
  • Dennis McCarthy & P. Kenneth Seidelmann (2009), TIME From Earth Rotation to Atomic Physics, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, ISBN 978-3-527-40780-4.
  • W G Melbourne, J D Mulholland, W L Sjogren, F M Sturms (1968), "Constants and Related Information for Astrodynamic Calculations", NASA Technical Report 32-1306, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, July 15, 1968.
  • L V Morrison, F R Stephenson (2004), "Historical values of the Earth's clock error ΔT and the calculation of eclipses", Journal for the History of Astronomy (ISSN 0021-8286), vol. 35(3) (2004), #120, pp. 327–336 (with addendum at vol. 36, p. 339).
  • Simon Newcomb (1895), Tables of the Sun ("Tables of the Motion of the Earth on its Axis and Around the Sun", in "Tables of the Four Inner Planets", vol. 6, part 1, of Astronomical Papers prepared for the use of the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac (1895), at pages 1–169).
  • W de Sitter (1927), "On the secular accelerations and the fluctuations of the longitudes of the moon, the sun, Mercury and Venus", Bull. Astron. Inst. Netherlands, vol. 4 (1927), pages 21–38.
  • H Spencer Jones, "The Rotation of the Earth, and the Secular Accelerations of the Sun, Moon and Planets", in Monthly Notes of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 99 (1939), pp. 541–558.
  • E M Standish, "Time scales in the JPL and CfA ephemerides", Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 336 (1998), 381–384.
  • F R Stephenson, L V Morrison (1984), "Long-term changes in the rotation of the earth – 700 B.C. to A.D. 1980", (Royal Society, Discussion on Rotation in the Solar System, London, England, Mar. 8, 9, 1984) Royal Society (London), Philosophical Transactions, Series A (ISSN 0080-4614), vol. 313 (1984), #1524, pp. 47–70.
  • F R Stephenson, L V Morrison (1995), "Long-Term Fluctuations in the Earth's Rotation: 700 BC to AD 1990", Royal Society (London), Philosophical Transactions, Series A (ISSN 0080-4614), vol. 351 (1995), #1695, pp. 165–202.
  • G M R Winkler and T C van Flandern (1977), "Ephemeris Time, relativity, and the problem of uniform time in astronomy", Astronomical Journal, vol. 82 (Jan. 1977), pp. 84–92.

ephemeris, time, term, ephemeris, time, often, abbreviated, principle, refer, time, association, with, ephemeris, itinerary, trajectory, astronomical, object, practice, been, used, more, specifically, refer, former, standard, astronomical, time, scale, adopted. The term ephemeris time often abbreviated ET can in principle refer to time in association with any ephemeris itinerary of the trajectory of an astronomical object In practice it has been used more specifically to refer to a former standard astronomical time scale adopted in 1952 by the IAU 1 and superseded during the 1970s 2 This time scale was proposed in 1948 to overcome the disadvantages of irregularly fluctuating mean solar time The intent was to define a uniform time as far as was then feasible based on Newtonian theory see below Definition of ephemeris time 1952 Ephemeris time was a first application of the concept of a dynamical time scale in which the time and time scale are defined implicitly inferred from the observed position of an astronomical object via the dynamical theory of its motion 3 a modern relativistic coordinate time scale implemented by the JPL ephemeris time argument Teph in a series of numerically integrated Development Ephemerides Among them is the DE405 ephemeris in widespread current use The time scale represented by Teph is closely related to but distinct by an offset and constant rate from the TCB time scale currently adopted as a standard by the IAU see below JPL ephemeris time argument Teph 4 Most of the following sections relate to the ephemeris time of the 1952 standard An impression has sometimes arisen that ephemeris time was in use from 1900 this probably arose because ET though proposed and adopted in the period 1948 1952 was defined in detail using formulae that made retrospective use of the epoch date of 1900 January 0 and of Newcomb s Tables of the Sun 5 6 The ephemeris time of the 1952 standard leaves a continuing legacy through its ephemeris second which became closely duplicated in the length of the current standard SI second see below Redefinition of the second Contents 1 History 1952 standard 2 Definition 1952 3 Implementations 3 1 Secondary realizations by lunar observations 3 2 Secondary realizations by atomic clocks 4 Revision of time scales 5 JPL ephemeris time argument Teph 6 Use in official almanacs and ephemerides 7 Redefinition of the second 8 Notes and references 9 BibliographyHistory 1952 standard EditEphemeris time ET adopted as standard in 1952 was originally designed as an approach to a uniform time scale to be freed from the effects of irregularity in the rotation of the Earth for the convenience of astronomers and other scientists for example for use in ephemerides of the Sun as observed from the Earth the Moon and the planets It was proposed in 1948 by G M Clemence 7 From the time of John Flamsteed 1646 1719 it had been believed that the Earth s daily rotation was uniform But in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries with increasing precision of astronomical measurements it began to be suspected and was eventually established that the rotation of the Earth i e the length of the day showed irregularities on short time scales and was slowing down on longer time scales The evidence was compiled by W de Sitter 1927 8 who wrote If we accept this hypothesis then the astronomical time given by the Earth s rotation and used in all practical astronomical computations differs from the uniform or Newtonian time which is defined as the independent variable of the equations of celestial mechanics De Sitter offered a correction to be applied to the mean solar time given by the Earth s rotation to get uniform time Other astronomers of the period also made suggestions for obtaining uniform time including A Danjon 1929 who suggested in effect that observed positions of the Moon Sun and planets when compared with their well established gravitational ephemerides could better and more uniformly define and determine time 9 Thus the aim developed to provide a new time scale for astronomical and scientific purposes to avoid the unpredictable irregularities of the mean solar time scale and to replace for these purposes Universal Time UT and any other time scale based on the rotation of the Earth around its axis such as sidereal time The American astronomer G M Clemence 1948 7 made a detailed proposal of this type based on the results of the English Astronomer Royal H Spencer Jones 1939 10 Clemence 1948 made it clear that his proposal was intended for the convenience of astronomers and other scientists only and that it was logical to continue the use of mean solar time for civil purposes 11 De Sitter and Clemence both referred to the proposal as Newtonian or uniform time D Brouwer suggested the name ephemeris time 12 Following this an astronomical conference held in Paris in 1950 recommended that in all cases where the mean solar second is unsatisfactory as a unit of time by reason of its variability the unit adopted should be the sidereal year at 1900 0 that the time reckoned in this unit be designated ephemeris time and gave Clemence s formula see Definition of ephemeris time 1952 for translating mean solar time to ephemeris time The International Astronomical Union approved this recommendation at its 1952 general assembly 12 13 Practical introduction took some time see Use of ephemeris time in official almanacs and ephemerides ephemeris time ET remained a standard until superseded in the 1970s by further time scales see Revision During the currency of ephemeris time as a standard the details were revised a little The unit was redefined in terms of the tropical year at 1900 0 instead of the sidereal year 12 and the standard second was defined first as 1 31556925 975 of the tropical year at 1900 0 12 14 and then as the slightly modified fraction 1 31556925 9747 instead 15 finally being redefined in 1967 8 in terms of the cesium atomic clock standard see below Although ET is no longer directly in use it leaves a continuing legacy Its successor time scales such as TDT as well as the atomic time scale IAT TAI were designed with a relationship that provides continuity with ephemeris time 16 ET was used for the calibration of atomic clocks in the 1950s 17 Close equality between the ET second with the later SI second as defined with reference to the cesium atomic clock has been verified to within 1 part in 1010 18 In this way decisions made by the original designers of ephemeris time influenced the length of today s standard SI second and in turn this has a continuing influence on the number of leap seconds which have been needed for insertion into current broadcast time scales to keep them approximately in step with mean solar time Definition 1952 EditEphemeris time was defined in principle by the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun 12 but its practical implementation was usually achieved in another way see below Its detailed definition was based on Simon Newcomb s Tables of the Sun 1895 5 implemented in a new way to accommodate certain observed discrepancies In the introduction to Tables of the Sun the basis of the tables p 9 includes a formula for the Sun s mean longitude at a time indicated by interval T in units of Julian centuries of 36525 mean solar days 19 reckoned from Greenwich Mean Noon on 0 January 1900 Ls 279 41 48 04 129 602 768 13T 1 089T2 1 Spencer Jones work of 1939 10 showed that differences between the observed positions of the Sun and the predicted positions given by Newcomb s formula demonstrated the need for the following correction to the formula DLs 1 00 2 97T 1 23T2 0 0748Bwhere the times of observation are in Universal time not corrected to Newtonian time and 0 0748B represents an irregular fluctuation calculated from lunar observations 20 Thus a conventionally corrected form of Newcomb s formula incorporating the corrections on the basis of mean solar time would be the sum of the two preceding expressions Ls 279 41 49 04 129 602 771 10T 2 32T2 0 0748B 2 Clemence s 1948 proposal however did not adopt such a correction of mean solar time Instead the same numbers were used as in Newcomb s original uncorrected formula 1 but now applied somewhat prescriptively to define a new time and time scale implicitly based on the real position of the Sun Ls 279 41 48 04 129 602 768 13E 1 089E2 3 With this reapplication the time variable now given as E represents time in ephemeris centuries of 36525 ephemeris days of 86400 ephemeris seconds each The 1961 official reference summarized the concept as such The origin and rate of ephemeris time are defined to make the Sun s mean longitude agree with Newcomb s expression 21 From the comparison of formulae 2 and 3 both of which express the same real solar motion in the same real time but defined on separate time scales Clemence arrived at an explicit expression estimating the difference in seconds of time between ephemeris time and mean solar time in the sense ET UT d t 24 s 349 72 s 3165 T 29 s 949 T 2 1 821 B displaystyle delta t 24 s 349 72 s 3165T 29 s 949T 2 1 821B 4 20 with the 24 349 seconds of time corresponding to the 1 00 in DLs Clemence s formula today superseded by more modern estimations was included in the original conference decision on ephemeris time In view of the fluctuation term practical determination of the difference between ephemeris time and UT depended on observation Inspection of the formulae above shows that the ideally constant units of ephemeris time have been for the whole of the twentieth century very slightly shorter than the corresponding but not precisely constant units of mean solar time which besides their irregular fluctuations tend to lengthen gradually This finding is consistent with the modern results of Morrison and Stephenson 22 see article DT Implementations EditSecondary realizations by lunar observations Edit Although ephemeris time was defined in principle by the orbital motion of the Earth around the Sun 23 it was usually measured in practice by the orbital motion of the Moon around the Earth 24 These measurements can be considered as secondary realizations in a metrological sense of the primary definition of ET in terms of the solar motion after a calibration of the mean motion of the Moon with respect to the mean motion of the Sun 25 Reasons for the use of lunar measurements were practically based the Moon moves against the background of stars about 13 times as fast as the Sun s corresponding rate of motion and the accuracy of time determinations from lunar measurements is correspondingly greater When ephemeris time was first adopted time scales were still based on astronomical observation as they always had been The accuracy was limited by the accuracy of optical observation and corrections of clocks and time signals were published in arrear Secondary realizations by atomic clocks Edit A few years later with the invention of the cesium atomic clock an alternative offered itself Increasingly after the calibration in 1958 of the cesium atomic clock by reference to ephemeris time 17 cesium atomic clocks running on the basis of ephemeris seconds began to be used and kept in step with ephemeris time The atomic clocks offered a further secondary realization of ET on a quasi real time basis 25 that soon proved to be more useful than the primary ET standard not only more convenient but also more precisely uniform than the primary standard itself Such secondary realizations were used and described as ET with an awareness that the time scales based on the atomic clocks were not identical to that defined by the primary ephemeris time standard but rather an improvement over it on account of their closer approximation to uniformity 26 The atomic clocks gave rise to the atomic time scale and to what was first called Terrestrial Dynamical Time and is now Terrestrial Time defined to provide continuity with ET 16 The availability of atomic clocks together with the increasing accuracy of astronomical observations which meant that relativistic corrections were at least in the foreseeable future no longer going to be small enough to be neglected 27 led to the eventual replacement of the ephemeris time standard by more refined time scales including terrestrial time and barycentric dynamical time to which ET can be seen as an approximation Revision of time scales EditIn 1976 the IAU resolved that the theoretical basis for its then current since 1952 standard of Ephemeris Time was non relativistic and that therefore beginning in 1984 Ephemeris Time would be replaced by two relativistic timescales intended to constitute dynamical timescales Terrestrial Dynamical Time TDT and Barycentric Dynamical Time TDB 28 Difficulties were recognized which led to these in turn being superseded in the 1990s by time scales Terrestrial Time TT Geocentric Coordinate Time GCT TCG and Barycentric Coordinate Time BCT TCB 16 JPL ephemeris time argument Teph EditHigh precision ephemerides of sun moon and planets were developed and calculated at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL over a long period and the latest available were adopted for the ephemerides in the Astronomical Almanac starting in 1984 Although not an IAU standard the ephemeris time argument Teph has been in use at that institution since the 1960s The time scale represented by Teph has been characterized as a relativistic coordinate time that differs from Terrestrial Time only by small periodic terms with an amplitude not exceeding 2 milliseconds of time it is linearly related to but distinct by an offset and constant rate which is of the order of 0 5 s a from the TCB time scale adopted in 1991 as a standard by the IAU Thus for clocks on or near the geoid Teph within 2 milliseconds but not so closely TCB can be used as approximations to Terrestrial Time and via the standard ephemerides Teph is in widespread use 4 Partly in acknowledgement of the widespread use of Teph via the JPL ephemerides IAU resolution 3 of 2006 29 re defined Barycentric Dynamical Time TDB as a current standard As re defined in 2006 TDB is a linear transformation of TCB The same IAU resolution also stated in note 4 that the independent time argument of the JPL ephemeris DE405 which is called Teph here the IAU source cites 4 is for practical purposes the same as TDB defined in this Resolution Thus the new TDB like Teph is essentially a more refined continuation of the older ephemeris time ET and apart from the lt 2 ms periodic fluctuations has the same mean rate as that established for ET in the 1950s Use in official almanacs and ephemerides EditEphemeris time based on the standard adopted in 1952 was introduced into the Astronomical Ephemeris UK and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac replacing UT in the main ephemerides in the issues for 1960 and after 30 But the ephemerides in the Nautical Almanac by then a separate publication for the use of navigators continued to be expressed in terms of UT The ephemerides continued on this basis through 1983 with some changes due to adoption of improved values of astronomical constants after which for 1984 onwards they adopted the JPL ephemerides Previous to the 1960 change the Improved Lunar Ephemeris had already been made available in terms of ephemeris time for the years 1952 1959 31 computed by W J Eckert from Brown s theory with modifications recommended by Clemence 1948 Redefinition of the second EditSuccessive definitions of the unit of ephemeris time are mentioned above History The value adopted for the 1956 1960 standard second the fraction 1 31 556 925 9747 of the tropical year for 1900 January 0 at 12 hours ephemeris time was obtained from the linear time coefficient in Newcomb s expression for the solar mean longitude above taken and applied with the same meaning for the time as in formula 3 above The relation with Newcomb s coefficient can be seen from 1 31 556 925 9747 129 602 768 13 360 60 60 36 525 86 400 Caesium atomic clocks became operational in 1955 and quickly confirmed the evidence that the rotation of the Earth fluctuated irregularly 32 This confirmed the unsuitability of the mean solar second of Universal Time as a measure of time interval for the most precise purposes After three years of comparisons with lunar observations Markowitz et al 1958 determined that the ephemeris second corresponded to 9 192 631 770 20 cycles of the chosen cesium resonance 17 Following this in 1967 68 the General Conference on Weights and Measures CGPM replaced the definition of the SI second by the following The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom Although this is an independent definition that does not refer to the older basis of ephemeris time it uses the same quantity as the value of the ephemeris second measured by the cesium clock in 1958 This SI second referred to atomic time was later verified by Markowitz 1988 to be in agreement within 1 part in 1010 with the second of ephemeris time as determined from lunar observations 18 For practical purposes the length of the ephemeris second can be taken as equal to the length of the second of Barycentric Dynamical Time TDB or Terrestrial Time TT or its predecessor TDT The difference between ET and UT is called DT it changes irregularly but the long term trend is parabolic decreasing from ancient times until the nineteenth century 22 and increasing since then at a rate corresponding to an increase in the solar day length of 1 7 ms per century see leap seconds International Atomic Time TAI was set equal to UT2 at 1 January 1958 0 00 00 At that time DT was already about 32 18 seconds The difference between Terrestrial Time TT the successor to ephemeris time and atomic time was later defined as follows 1977 January 1 000 3725 TT 1977 January 1 000 0000 TAI i e TT TAI 32 184 secondsThis difference may be assumed constant the rates of TT and TAI are designed to be identical Notes and references Edit ESAE 1961 Explanatory Supplement 1961 esp p 9 ESAA 1992 P K Seidelmann ed especially at pp 41 42 and at p 79 B Guinot and P K Seidelmann 1988 at p 304 5 a b c E M Standish 1998 a b S Newcomb 1895 For the components of the definition including its retrospective aspect see G M Clemence 1948 esp p 172 and ESAE 1961 Explanatory Supplement 1961 esp pages 69 and 87 a b G M Clemence 1948 W de Sitter 1927 G M Clemence 1971 a b H Spencer Jones 1939 Clemence 1948 at p 171 a b c d e ESAA 1992 see page 79 At the IAU meeting in Rome 1952 see ESAE 1961 at sect 1C p 9 also Clemence 1971 ESAA 1992 p 79 citing decision of International Committee for Weights and Measures CIPM Sept 1954 ESAA 1992 see page 80 citing CIPM recommendation Oct 1956 adopted 1960 by the General Conference on Weights and Measures CGPM a b c ESAA 1992 at page 42 a b c W Markowitz R G Hall L Essen J V L Parry 1958 a b Wm Markowitz 1988 The unit of mean solar day is left implicit on p 9 but made explicit on p 20 of Newcomb 1895 a b Clemence 1948 p 172 following Spencer Jones 1939 ESAE 1961 at p 70 a b L V Morrison amp F R Stephenson 2004 also F R Stephenson L V Morrison 1984 and F R Stephenson L V Morrison 1995 Clemence 1948 at pp 171 3 W Markowitz amp others 1955 W Markowitz 1959 also W Markowitz R G Hall L Essen J V L Parry 1958 a b B Guinot amp P K Seidelmann 1988 at p 305 W G Melbourne amp others 1968 section II E 4 5 pages 15 16 including footnote 7 noted that the Jet Propulsion Laboratory spacecraft tracking and data reduction programs of that time including the Single Precision Orbit Determination Program used as ET the current US atomic clock time A 1 offset by 32 25 seconds The discussion also noted that the usage was inaccurate the quantity indicated was not identical with any of the other realizations of ET such as ET0 ET1 and that while A 1 gave certainly a closer approximation to uniform time than ET1 there were no grounds for considering either the atomic clocks or any other measures of ET as perfectly uniform Section II F pages 18 19 indicates that an improved time measure of A 1 32 15 seconds applied in the JPL Double Precision Orbit Determination Program was also designated ET G M R Winkler and T C van Flandern 1977 IAU resolutions 1976 see also ESAA 1992 at p 41 IAU 2006 resolution 3 PDF ESAA 1992 at p 612 Improved Lunar Ephemeris US Government Printing Office 1954 McCarthy amp Seidelmann 2009 Ch 4 Variable Earth Rotation Bibliography EditG M Clemence On the System of Astronomical Constants Astronomical Journal vol 53 6 1948 issue 1170 pp 169 179 G M Clemence 1971 The Concept of Ephemeris Time Journal for the History of Astronomy vol 2 1971 pp 73 79 B Guinot and P K Seidelmann 1988 Time scales Their history definition and interpretation Astronomy and Astrophysics vol 194 nos 1 2 April 1988 pp 304 308 ESAA 1992 P K Seidelmann ed Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac University Science Books CA 1992 ISBN 0 935702 68 7 ESAE 1961 Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Ephemeris and the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac prepared jointly by the Nautical Almanac Offices of the United Kingdom and the United States of America HMSO London 1961 IAU resolutions 1976 Resolutions adopted by the IAU in 1976 at Grenoble Improved Lunar Ephemeris US Government Printing Office 1954 W Markowitz R G Hall S Edelson 1955 Ephemeris time from photographic positions of the moon Astronomical Journal vol 60 1955 p 171 W Markowitz R G Hall L Essen J V L Parry 1958 Frequency of cesium in terms of ephemeris time Physical Review Letters vol 1 1958 105 107 W Markowitz 1959 Variations in the Rotation of the Earth Results Obtained with the Dual Rate Moon Camera and Photographic Zenith Tubes Astronomical Journal vol 64 1959 pp 106 113 Wm Markowitz 1988 Comparisons of ET Solar ET Lunar UT and TDT in A K Babcock amp G A Wilkins eds The Earth s Rotation and Reference Frames for Geodesy and Geophysics IAU Symposia 128 1988 pp 413 418 Dennis McCarthy amp P Kenneth Seidelmann 2009 TIME From Earth Rotation to Atomic Physics Wiley VCH Weinheim ISBN 978 3 527 40780 4 W G Melbourne J D Mulholland W L Sjogren F M Sturms 1968 Constants and Related Information for Astrodynamic Calculations NASA Technical Report 32 1306 Jet Propulsion Laboratory July 15 1968 L V Morrison F R Stephenson 2004 Historical values of the Earth s clock error DT and the calculation of eclipses Journal for the History of Astronomy ISSN 0021 8286 vol 35 3 2004 120 pp 327 336 with addendum at vol 36 p 339 Simon Newcomb 1895 Tables of the Sun Tables of the Motion of the Earth on its Axis and Around the Sun in Tables of the Four Inner Planets vol 6 part 1 of Astronomical Papers prepared for the use of the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac 1895 at pages 1 169 W de Sitter 1927 On the secular accelerations and the fluctuations of the longitudes of the moon the sun Mercury and Venus Bull Astron Inst Netherlands vol 4 1927 pages 21 38 H Spencer Jones The Rotation of the Earth and the Secular Accelerations of the Sun Moon and Planets in Monthly Notes of the Royal Astronomical Society vol 99 1939 pp 541 558 E M Standish Time scales in the JPL and CfA ephemerides Astronomy amp Astrophysics vol 336 1998 381 384 F R Stephenson L V Morrison 1984 Long term changes in the rotation of the earth 700 B C to A D 1980 Royal Society Discussion on Rotation in the Solar System London England Mar 8 9 1984 Royal Society London Philosophical Transactions Series A ISSN 0080 4614 vol 313 1984 1524 pp 47 70 F R Stephenson L V Morrison 1995 Long Term Fluctuations in the Earth s Rotation 700 BC to AD 1990 Royal Society London Philosophical Transactions Series A ISSN 0080 4614 vol 351 1995 1695 pp 165 202 G M R Winkler and T C van Flandern 1977 Ephemeris Time relativity and the problem of uniform time in astronomy Astronomical Journal vol 82 Jan 1977 pp 84 92 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ephemeris time amp oldid 1122095007, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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