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  New Year's Day 2006: delayed by a second   (Reuters)  Updated: 2005-12-25 15:05  
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Get ready for a minute with 61 seconds. Scientists are 
delaying the start of 2006 by the first "leap second" in seven years, a timing 
tweak meant to make up for changes in the Earth's rotation.
  The 
adjustment will be carried out by sticking an extra second into atomic clocks 
worldwide at the stroke of midnight Coordinated Universal Time, the widely 
adopted international standard, the U.S. National Institute of Standards and 
Technology said this week.
 "Enjoy New Year's Eve a second longer," the institute said in an explanatory 
notice. "You can toot your horn an extra second this year."
 Coordinated Universal Time coincides with winter time in London. On the U.S. 
East Coast, the extra second occurs just before 7 p.m. on New Year's Eve. Atomic 
clocks at that moment will read 23:59:60 before rolling over to all zeros.
 A leap second is added to keep uniform timekeeping within 0.9 second of the 
Earth's rotational time, which can speed up or slow down because of many 
factors, including ocean tides. The first leap second was added on June 30, 
1972, according to NIST, an arm of the U.S. Commerce Department.
 Since 1999 until recently, the two time standards have been in close enough 
synch to escape any need to add a leap second, NIST said.
 Although it is possible to have a negative leap second -- that is, a second 
deducted from Coordinated Universal Time -- so far all have been add-ons, 
reflecting the Earth's general slowing trend due to tidal breaking.
 Deciding when to introduce a leap second is the responsibility of the 
International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, a standards-setting 
body. Under an international pact, the preference for leap seconds is December 
31 or June 30.
 Precise time measurements are needed for high-speed communications systems 
among other modern technologies. 
  
  
  
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