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Richard Clark wrote:
On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 09:06:49 -0700, Jim Lux wrote: hear the tocks fairly clearly and even understand the voice. (Who knew the announcer's phrase for UTC "Coordinated Universal Time"?). UTC is not an acronym. It's a madeup identifier that matches neither the English (Coordinated Universal Time) or the French (T U C.. I won't even attempt to figure out what it is..). Hi All, In fact, UTC is an acronym (already anticipated by Frnak and explicitly stated every minute). It is but one of several, this one being rather genericized (because any longer would force a lot of talking, and minute passes by pretty quickly). The others would include: UTC(NIST), UT1; and the academic UT0, and UT2. Au contraire... while UT1, UT0, and UT2 are, in fact, acronyms of a sort, primarily based on astronomical time, this is not the case for UTC.. the coordination has to do with matching up UT and TAI (atomic) time.. all those leap seconds, etc. As one online source puts it: The (Bureau Internationale de l'Heure) BIH was charged with the task of monitoring and maintaining the program and introduced the term Temps Universel Coordinné or Coordinated Universal Time for the coordinated time scale in 1964. BIH is the predecessor of the current BIPM (who seem to have a problem with the standard kilo losing mass) http://www.bipm.org/ or, for more information: http://syrte.obspm.fr/journees2004/PDF/Arias2.pdf which says: The name of Coordinated Universal Time UTC appeared in CCIR documents in the early 60s. One might also seek a paper from 1964, by Guinot. (who was a time guy at the BIH back then) A paper by Dennis McCarthy at USNO on "Evolution of Time Scales" mentions in Section 6 that: the term "Coordinated Universal Time" was introduced in the 1950s to designate a time scale in which the adjustments to quartz crystal clocks were coordinated among participating laboratories in the US and UK. A more recent paper by Guinot says: "Until 1965, the more or less common scale for emission of signals, which had received spontaneously the name of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), had not been strictly defined." The reason for the initials order is that there is an hidden comma. Universal Time, Coordinated. Funny, thing, though, that if one searches the literature of the time for that particular sequence of words, it never occurs.. Given that Coordinated Universal Time existed well before UTC, I suspect that the comma thing is a post hoc creation. Wikipedia reports this as an erroneous expansion, but Wikipedia wasn't there in my Metrology classes (a couple dozen miles from NBS) where we worked with these NBS standards. It wasn't there when (1974) I performed the second leap second on my Cesium Beam Standard which was calibrated through WWVB (taking about half an hour, part of which was waiting during the roughly 15 minute intervals between TOCs). My antenna was so far away (on the fantail of the ship in another "time zone"), that I had to slip the time by 100nS. |
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