August 3, 2022

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Earth is spinning faster than usual, but why? What experts say after shortest day ever

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Time is flying. Literally.

Scientists at the National Physical Laboratory in England recorded the shortest day ever on June 29 and another shortened day on July 26, Popular Mechanics reported.

On both of these days, the Earth completed its usual 24-hour rotation in less than 24 hours, The Guardian reported. June 29 was 1.59 milliseconds shorter than usual—the shortest day since the 1960s when scientists began using to measure time, Forbes reported. July 26 neared the newly-set , at 1.50 milliseconds shorter than usual, according to timeanddate.com.

The shortened days are caused by the Earth spinning faster than usual, Interesting Engineering reported.

But why is the Earth spinning faster? Scientists are not completely certain, but they have a few competing explanations:

Australian astronomer Fred Watson explained to ABC, saying "when you start looking at the real nitty gritty, you realize that Earth is not just a solid ball that is spinning."

"It's got liquid on the inside, it's got liquid on the outside, and it's got an atmosphere and all of these things slosh around a bit," Watson told ABC.

That sloshing around can influence the speed of the Earth's spin, ABC reported.

Some scientists think this could be the beginning of a new period of shorter days, Interesting Engineering reported.

Still, the possible implications of shorter-than-usual days—namely, a "negative leap second" where there is a coordinated effort to drop a second to catch up with solar time—is still quite a ways off, ABC reported.

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