dynamical time, specialized timescale used to describe the motion of objects in space.

As a practical matter, time can be defined as that coordinate which can most simply be related to the evolution of closed systems. Proper time is the time measured by a clock in a reference system in which it is at rest. Coordinate time is the time coordinate of a four-dimensional relativistic transformation from a reference system using proper time. In 1991 the International Astronomical Union (IAU) defined several kinds of time in a manner consistent with the general theory of relativity, and these are described below. Each kind of time is appropriate for a particular four-dimensional reference frame. All are defined so that there is no global rotation of the frame with respect to distant extragalactic objects, and all are based on the International System of Units (SI) second, which is defined as 9,192,631,770 periods of oscillation of the radiation from the ground-state hyperfine transition of cesium-133 (see atomic time).

Terrestrial Time (TT)—formerly Terrestrial Dynamical Time (TDT), the successor to Ephemeris Time (ET)—is the theoretical timescale of geocentric ephemerides, and it is specified as TT = TAI* + 32.184 seconds, where TAI* denotes a reprocessed computation of International Atomic Time (TAI) and the 32.184-second offset was chosen so as to provide continuity with ET. TT is defined to be exactly 32.184 seconds offset from TAI at the start of Jan. 1, 1977. For times previous to 1955, when TAI was not available, TT must be extrapolated backward using ET, a timescale defined by the theory of the motions of solar system bodies. ET, before being superseded by TT, was originally based upon the length of the tropical year in 1900 as determined by the American astronomer Simon Newcomb. Different realizations of TT are denoted by TT(xxx), where xxx is an identifier; the International Bureau of Weights and Measures distributes tables that can be used to obtain TT from TAI.

Alfred North Whitehead
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Barycentric Coordinate Time (TCB) is the time coordinate measured by a nonrotating observer that is at rest with respect to the solar system’s barycentre (centre of mass) but is far enough away from the solar system that its gravitational effects are negligible.

Geocentric Coordinate Time (TCG) is the time coordinate measured by a nonrotating observer at rest with respect to the Earth’s centre and does not include the effects of the Earth’s gravitational field. The transformation between TT and TCG was originally specified in terms of the geoid (the hypothetical surface of the Earth that coincides with mean sea level). However, because of difficulties in defining the geoid to the required precision, in 2000 the IAU revised the definition so that TT differs from TCG by a constant rate such that the ratio of TCG to TT is 1 + 6.969290134 × 10−10. Detailed transformation equations can be found in the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service conventions.

Barycentric Dynamical Time (TDB) is a dynamical timescale whose use the IAU permits where necessary for user convenience. TDB differs from TT only by periodic terms related to the Earth’s orbit, but it is applied to a reference system at rest with respect to the solar system’s barycentre. Due to TDB’s nonincorporation of the secular (long-term trend) part of the relativistic time transformation to the barycentre, planetary and lunar data reductions using it would lead to different numerical estimates of masses and other parameters of solar system bodies than would reductions using the fully approved timescales.

Demetrios N. Matsakis
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Dirk Brouwer
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dynamical time

Ephemeris Time, (ET), the first dynamical time scale in history; it was defined by the International Astronomical Union in the 1950s and was superseded by Barycentric Dynamical Time in 1984. (See dynamical time.)

Ephemeris Time could be obtained by observing the orbital position of any planet or satellite and then using an ephemeris, which lists calculated orbital positions as a function of time. The orbital position of the Earth about the Sun, as developed mathematically in the American astronomer Simon Newcomb’s tables of the Sun (1898), were selected as the standard to define the numerical measure of Ephemeris Time. (The Earth and Sun are 180° apart; that is, opposite each other in the plane of the ecliptic, so that an observation of the Sun with respect to the stars gives the orbital position of the Earth.) Newcomb’s tables were used to form a solar ephemeris, or a table that gives the Sun’s coordinates for successive values of Ephemeris Time.

Values of Ephemeris Time were also obtained from observations of the Moon by using the lunar ephemeris for the calculated position. The lunar ephemeris, however, contains an empirical, nongravitational term, which was needed to correct for the effects of tides raised in the Earth by the Moon. The Moon was generally used to determine Ephemeris Time because of its rapid orbital motion. Very accurate positions of the Moon were obtained visually by observations of occultations of stars by the Moon. By the time Ephemeris Time was superseded in 1984, it had served two important purposes: (1) the definition of a second of Ephemeris Time served as the basis for the redefinition in 1967 of the SI second on the atomic time scale, and (2) ET was the reference scale used for comparison with rotational time to determine variations in the Earth’s rotational speed from about 700 bc to ad 1955.

Alfred North Whitehead
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