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Leap second decision is postponed

By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC News

A decision on whether to abolish the leap second - the occasional, extra second

added to the world's time - has been deferred.

Experts at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) were unable to reach

a consensus, so moved the matter to a meeting in 2015.

The US argued at the meeting that leap seconds were causing problems for

communication and navigation systems.

But the UK said that the long-term consequences of losing it were great.

An ITU spokesman said that Japan, Italy, Mexico and France all supported the

United States' stance on losing the leap second, while Germany and Canada, like

the UK, wanted the extra second to stay.

More countries though, including Nigeria, Russia and Turkey, wanted further

study.

As a result, the ITU decided that more research was needed to consider the

broader social implications of losing the leap second before a decision could

be taken.

The ITU suggested that a study group should investigate the issue, before

presenting any proposals at the next World Radio Conference in 2015.

It means that for now, the world's time will continue to be linked to the

Earth's rotation.

The next leap second is due to be added on 30 June 2012.

Out of time

The leap second was introduced in 1972.

It was added to keep our modern timekeepers - atomic clocks, which rely on the

vibrations in atoms to provide a very accurate measurement of time - in line

with our slightly less reliable timekeeper, the Earth.

Because our planet wobbles a little on its axis as it spins, it means some days

end up being a few milliseconds longer or shorter than others.

This means that over time, the time based on atomic clocks, and the time based

on the Earth's rotation drift further and further apart.

When this difference is deemed by the International Earth Rotation Service,

which monitors the Earth's activity, to be approximately 0.9 seconds, a leap

second is added to pull the two back into sync.

Sometimes a leap second can be added every year, sometimes not for several,

with six-months' notice provided before action needs to be taken.

What is a leap second? The BBC's Rebecca Morelle went to Greenwich's Royal

Observatory to find out

Those who wanted to lose the leap second said that the one-second increments

were becoming increasingly problematic for a vast range of modern navigational

and communication systems, such as sat-nav, financial services, air traffic

control and the internet.

These all rely on having a continuous and stable timescale, so adding a

somewhat unpredictable, one-second increment can be disruptive.

The UK, though, says any problems are exaggerated - and that losing the leap

second could cause long-term problems, as the time based on the atomic clocks

and the time based on the Earth's rotation would move ever further apart.

Over decades, this would amount to a minute's difference, but over 500 years

this could be an hour, and over thousands of years, the Sun could be setting

when atomic clocks claim it is morning.

Peter Whibberley, senior research scientist at the National Physical Laboratory

in Teddington, UK, who is leading the UK's delegation, said: "This result

achieves the UK's aims of securing much broader debate and understanding of the

consequences of ending the link between UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and

solar time before a final decision is taken."