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Related: About this forumEarth is spinning faster, leading timekeepers to consider an unprecedented move
Earth is spinning faster, leading timekeepers to consider an unprecedented move
By Jacopo Prisco, CNN
7 min read
Updated 7:01 PM EDT, Mon July 21, 2025

Earth is spinning faster this summer, leading astronomers to notice that some days have clocked in at slightly less than the standard 24 hours. This stack composite photo shows a paddy rice field under the starry sky in Shuangyashan City, in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province. Qu Yubao/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images
(CNN) Earth is spinning faster this summer, making the days marginally shorter and attracting the attention of scientists and timekeepers.
July 10 was the shortest day of the year so far, lasting 1.36 milliseconds less than 24 hours, according to data from the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service and the US Naval Observatory, compiled by timeanddate.com. More exceptionally short days are coming on July 22 and August 5, currently predicted to be 1.34 and 1.25 milliseconds shorter than 24 hours, respectively.
The length of a day is the time it takes for the planet to complete one full rotation on its axis 24 hours or 86,400 seconds on average. But in reality, each rotation is slightly irregular due to a variety of factors, such as the gravitational pull of the moon, seasonal changes in the atmosphere and the influence of Earths liquid core. As a result, a full rotation usually takes slightly less or slightly more than 86,400 seconds a discrepancy of just milliseconds that doesnt have any obvious effect on everyday life.
However these discrepancies can, in the long run, affect computers, satellites and telecommunications, which is why even the smallest time deviations are tracked using atomic clocks, which were introduced in 1955. Some experts believe this could lead to a scenario similar to the Y2K problem, which threatened to bring modern civilization to a halt.
Atomic clocks count the oscillations of atoms held in a vacuum chamber within the clock itself to calculate 24 hours to the utmost degree of precision. We call the resulting time UTC, or Coordinated Universal Time, which is based on around 450 atomic clocks and is the global standard for timekeeping, as well as the time to which all our phones and computers are set.
{snip}
By Jacopo Prisco, CNN
7 min read
Updated 7:01 PM EDT, Mon July 21, 2025

Earth is spinning faster this summer, leading astronomers to notice that some days have clocked in at slightly less than the standard 24 hours. This stack composite photo shows a paddy rice field under the starry sky in Shuangyashan City, in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province. Qu Yubao/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images
(CNN) Earth is spinning faster this summer, making the days marginally shorter and attracting the attention of scientists and timekeepers.
July 10 was the shortest day of the year so far, lasting 1.36 milliseconds less than 24 hours, according to data from the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service and the US Naval Observatory, compiled by timeanddate.com. More exceptionally short days are coming on July 22 and August 5, currently predicted to be 1.34 and 1.25 milliseconds shorter than 24 hours, respectively.
The length of a day is the time it takes for the planet to complete one full rotation on its axis 24 hours or 86,400 seconds on average. But in reality, each rotation is slightly irregular due to a variety of factors, such as the gravitational pull of the moon, seasonal changes in the atmosphere and the influence of Earths liquid core. As a result, a full rotation usually takes slightly less or slightly more than 86,400 seconds a discrepancy of just milliseconds that doesnt have any obvious effect on everyday life.
However these discrepancies can, in the long run, affect computers, satellites and telecommunications, which is why even the smallest time deviations are tracked using atomic clocks, which were introduced in 1955. Some experts believe this could lead to a scenario similar to the Y2K problem, which threatened to bring modern civilization to a halt.
Atomic clocks count the oscillations of atoms held in a vacuum chamber within the clock itself to calculate 24 hours to the utmost degree of precision. We call the resulting time UTC, or Coordinated Universal Time, which is based on around 450 atomic clocks and is the global standard for timekeeping, as well as the time to which all our phones and computers are set.
{snip}
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Earth is spinning faster, leading timekeepers to consider an unprecedented move (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
19 hrs ago
OP
I kept getting a timeout message, as if the attempt to post was unsuccessful.
mahatmakanejeeves
18 hrs ago
#3
Fiendish Thingy
(20,090 posts)1. You have posted this FIVE times in the science forum
The options button allows you to self delete.
Tip: if your post hangs and is delayed while posting, dont keep smashing the post button.
mahatmakanejeeves
(65,711 posts)3. I kept getting a timeout message, as if the attempt to post was unsuccessful.
Thanks, and good morning.
Fiendish Thingy
(20,090 posts)4. Yes, I have gotten that timeout message before as well
Its important to go to the latest page and check to see if the post is there before hitting the post button again.
Moostache
(10,701 posts)2. The reference to Y2K is self-identifying as click bait from source.
Our AI masters are taking pages out of the Trump play book already and flooding the zone with enough meaningless crap to drown out the consequential in favor of the controversial.
If it bleeds it leads has gone digital.
Blue Owl
(56,719 posts)5. Don't know about you...
But Im really feeling that lost millisecond .