How long does the earth take to complete its rotation

Earth rotates on its axis in 24 hours, giving us day and night as it plays its own hide & seek with the Sun. In a major development, the Earth seems to be in a hurry this year in completing its days, as instruments have found June 29 to be the shortest day in recorded history.

The Earth completed its spin in 1.59 milliseconds less than 24 hours on June 29 this year, confirming speculations by scientists that the Earth's rotation is picking up pace. The minute change was detected by the atomic clock that is used to measure the rotational speed of the planet to the minutest detail.

This is a fluctuating change from the past when timeanddate in 2020 reported that the shortest day was 1.47 milliseconds, less than 24 hours, on July 19 of that year. Last year, the shortest day was fractionally longer than in 2020.

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WHY IS EARTH'S ROTATION SPEEDING?

The Earth's rotation is affected by major forces of nature including the oceans, tides, churnings in its inner and outer layers, and even the climate, which at the moment is going through consequential changes. While scientists are yet to conclude the reasons behind the downtrend in Earth's rotational speed, it is being attributed to the Chandler wobble.

How long does the earth take to complete its rotation

Atomic clocks measure the rotational speed of the planet. (Representative Image)

Chandler Wobble, according to Nasa, is a motion exhibited by Earth as it rotates on its axis. Scientists in 2000 solved this mystery and said that the principal cause of the Chandler wobble is fluctuating pressure on the bottom of the ocean, caused by temperature and salinity changes and wind-driven changes in the circulation of the oceans. While two-thirds of the Chandler wobble is caused by ocean-bottom pressure changes, the remaining one-third is by fluctuations in atmospheric pressure.

It's basically an irregular movement of the Earth's poles across the surface of the planet.

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WHAT HAPPENS NOW?

Scientists are yet to fully comprehend the effects that this minute change will have when compiled over a century. They suggest that if the planet continues to rotate faster and complete days in less than 24 hours, it could force them to add a negative leap second.

However, adding it would raise more issues than solutions, especially in the world of information & technology. According to a blog published by Meta, which has been campaigning against the addition of a leap second, the clock moves from 23:59:59 to 23:59:60 before resetting at 00:00:00, and the addition of a negative leap second would mean a time jump. This, according to the Independent, would crash computer programs and even corrupt data as time stamps change.

More details about this new trend in Earth's rotation are expected to be revealed during the annual meeting of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society.

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How long does the earth take to complete its rotation
Earth orbiting the Sun. Credit: Tau?olunga

I'm going to ask you how long a day is on Earth, and you're going to get the haunting suspicion that this is a trap. Your instincts are right, it's a trap! The answer may surprise you.

How long is a day on Earth? Or more specifically, how long does it take for the Earth to turn once on its axis? For all the stars to move through the sky and return to their original position? Go ahead, and yell your answer answer at the screen… 24 hours?

Wrong! It only takes 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.0916 seconds for the Earth to turn once its axis. Unless that's what you said. In which case, congratulations!

I'm sure you're now stumbling around in an incoherent state, trying to understand how you could have possibly messed this up. Were you reprogrammed by the hidden chronology conspiracy? Have time travellers been setting back all your clocks every day by 4 minutes? How was your whole life a lie?

Here's the deal. When you consider a day, you're probably thinking of your trusty clock, or maybe that smartphone lock screen that clearly measures 24 hours.

What you have come to understand as a "day" is classified by astronomers as a solar day. It's the amount of time it takes for the sun to move through the sky and return to roughly the same spot.

This is different from the amount of time it takes for the Earth to turn once on its axis – the 23 hours, 56 minutes. Also known as a sidereal day.

How long does the earth take to complete its rotation
Axis of the Earth’s pole. Credit: NASA / Mysid

Why are these two numbers different? Imagine the Earth orbiting the sun, taking a full 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds to complete the entire journey. At the same time, the Earth is spinning on its axis.

Each day that goes by, the Earth needs to turn a little further for the sun to return to the same place in the sky.… And that extra time is about 4 minutes.

If we only measured sidereal days, the position of the sun would slip back, day after day. For half of the year, the sun would be up between 12am and 12pm, and for the other half, it would be between 12pm and 12am. There would be no connection between what time it is, and whether or not the sun is in the sky.

Can you imagine teaching your children how to read a clock, and then getting them to multiply that by the calendar to figure out when My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic starts? Madness.

Better to keep them in the dark, teach them that a day is 24 hours, and deny all knowledge when they get a little older, and start to ask you challenging questions. But pedants among you already knew that, didn't you?

You already knew that a sidereal day is a little shorter than a solar day, and that everyone else has been living a lie. You're the only one who can read the signs and know the terrifying truth. Aren't you? Well, I'm here to tell you that you're wrong too. There's a deeper conspiracy that you're not a part of. Dear Pedant, your life is also a lie.

How long does the earth take to complete its rotation
Earthquakes. Credit: USGS / Google Maps / AJAX / SODA

The axis of the Earth's pole, the imaginary line that you could draw between the south pole and the north pole is currently pointed roughly at Polaris, aka The North Star. But we're wobbling like a top, and where the axis is pointing is slowly precessing westward over the course of 26,000 years. This means that a sidereal day is actually 0.0084 seconds shorter when you account for this extra movement of the Earth's axis.

There are other events that can increase or decrease the length of an Earth day. Because of our tidal interactions with the moon, the length of a day on Earth has increased by about 1.7 milliseconds over the last 100 years. Powerful earthquakes can change the Earth's rotation time by a few microseconds depending on how the tectonic plates shove around. Even as the glaciers melt, the rotation speed slows down a little more.

So, if someone asks you how long a day is, make sure they clarify whether it's a solar day or a sidereal day. And then ask if they'd like you to incorporate the Earth's precession, tidal locking and recent earthquakes into the calculation.

If they give you a knowing nod, congratulations, you're talking to another member of the vast chronology conspiracy.



Citation: How long is a day on Earth? (2015, November 6) retrieved 6 October 2022 from https://phys.org/news/2015-11-day-earth.html

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How long does it take the earth to fully rotate?

The earth rotates once every 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.09053 seconds, called the sidereal period, and its circumference is roughly 40,075 kilometers. Thus, the surface of the earth at the equator moves at a speed of 460 meters per second--or roughly 1,000 miles per hour.

Does it take 365 days for the earth to rotate?

Since it takes 365.25 days to complete one orbit, we account for the extra . 25 days by adding an extra day to our calendar every four years. So most of the time our calendar has 365 days, but in a leap year it has 366 days! There are 24 time zones on Earth.