According to scientists, Wednesday might be the shortest day of your life because of how quickly the Earth’s rotation is predicted to accelerate.
Three days this summer—July 9, July 22, and August 5—are predicted to be 1.3 to 1.51 milliseconds shorter than the average day, according to their research.
This is due to the fact that Earth’s rotation has accelerated recently; between 2020 and 2022, scientists noticed this phenomenon on atomic clocks.
These clocks are extremely precise devices that measure atom vibrations to maintain time.

Scientists think a number of things, including changes in the atmosphere, the melting of glaciers, motion in the Earth’s core, and a weakening magnetic field, could be causing the planet to spin faster, though the precise cause is yet unknown.
A solar day is when the Earth completes one full spin, which typically takes 24 hours, or precisely 86,400 seconds.
On July 5, 2024, a year ago, Earth spun 1.66 milliseconds faster than the typical 24-hour day, making it the fastest day ever recorded.
Even though today’s shorter day might not seem like much, scientists have discovered that the time difference can have an impact on everything from GPS accuracy and satellite systems to how we estimate time.
Because it shifts by minuscule amounts throughout time, becoming a few milliseconds quicker or slower, Earth’s rotation has never been flawless.
But it wasn’t until the 1970s that scientists began to accurately document these alterations.
Graham Jones, an astronomer at the University of London, analysed data from international Earth rotation services and the US Naval Observatory to arrive at the most recent estimations of Earth’s spin.
The ‘Length of Day,’ or LOD, was measured by atomic clocks that tracked the numbers. To the exact millisecond, that is how long it takes the Earth to complete one rotation.
Day length variations, even little ones, have an impact. Financial systems, phone networks, and GPS all depend on split-second accuracy. Technical issues can arise from a shift of only a few milliseconds.
Due to the moon’s gravitational pull, which has been extending our days into the 24-hour cycle we currently live by, Earth was actually slowing down before this recent acceleration in its rotation.
Stephen Meyers, a geoscientist and professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, discovered that the moon’s shifting gravitational pull on Earth causes days to get progressively longer as it gets farther away.
Though it would take roughly 200 million years, Meyers predicted that days on our planet would someday lengthen to 25 hours.
The planet’s rotation may be influenced by natural causes including climate change, which explains why Earth has accelerated since 2020.
The globe may literally be out of balance by a little amount due to weather patterns like El Niño and the summertime acceleration of glacier melting.
“There is more land in the northern hemisphere than the south,” added Richard Holme, a geophysicist at the University of Liverpool.
“In northern summer, the trees get leaves, this means that mass is moved from the ground to above the ground — further away from the Earth’s spin axis,” he told Live Science.
In essence, the mass distribution of any moving entity, such as Earth, determines how quickly it rotates. It’s comparable to how a figure skater pulls in their arms to spin more quickly.
The core’s shifting molten layers could also be the cause of this abrupt alteration. The earth is not entirely solid. The heated, swirling liquid metal makes up its core.
The molten metal has the power to alter the balance and form of the planet as it flows.
To determine what’s happening, scientists are examining all of these factors together, including the moon’s orbit, core activity, ocean flow, and wind patterns.
Earth started setting new records for the shortest day in 2020.
July 19 of that year was just 1.47 milliseconds away. The dip was 1.47 milliseconds on July 9, 2021.
On June 30, 2022, Earth logged its shortest day, which was 1.59 milliseconds shorter than a typical 24-hour day.
The rotation slowed a little in 2023, and no new records were broken. However, the pace increased once again in 2024. It was the year with the most continuously shorter days on record, with several days shattering prior records.
These estimates incorporate systematic corrections and smoothing to allow for natural oscillations and are based on historical data and computer models.
The world currently uses Coordinated Universal Time, or UTC, to keep time. To keep up with Earth’s gradual movements, we occasionally add a leap second.
Experts might have to eliminate a second, known as a negative leap second, if the Earth continues to rotate more quickly. This has never occurred before.
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