Leap Year
Since we just experience Leap Day
(2016 is a leap year) I thought I would give you some info on the origin of
Leap Year and some helpful information on how to determine which years will
have an extra day.
Why and When We Have Leap Years
by Borgna Brunner
2016 is a leap year, which means that
it has 366 days instead of the usual 365 days that an ordinary year has. An
extra day is added in a leap year—February 29 —which is called an intercalary
day or a leap day.
Why is a Leap Year Necessary?
Leap years are added to the calendar
to keep it working properly. The 365 days of the annual calendar are meant to
match up with the solar year. A solar year is the time it takes the Earth to
complete its orbit around the Sun — about one year. But the actual time it
takes for the Earth to travel around the Sun is in fact a little longer than
that—about 365 ¼ days (365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds, to be
precise). So the calendar and the solar year don't completely match—the
calendar year is a touch shorter than the solar year.
It may not seem like much of a
difference, but after a few years those extra quarter days in the solar year
begin to add up. After four years, for example, the four extra quarter days
would make the calendar fall behind the solar year by about a day. Over the
course of a century, the difference between the solar year and the calendar
year would become 25 days! Instead of summer beginning in June, for example, it
wouldn't start until nearly a month later, in July. As every kid looking
forward to summer vacation knows—calendar or no calendar—that's way too late!
So every four years a leap day is added to the calendar to allow it to catch up
to the solar year.
A Quick History Lesson
The Egyptians were the first to come
up with the idea of adding a leap day once every four years to keep the
calendar in sync with the solar year. Later, the Romans adopted this solution
for their calendar, and they became the first to designate February 29 as the
leap day.
But Wait! It's Not Quite that Simple!
The math seems to work out beautifully
when you add an extra day to the calendar every four years to compensate for
the extra quarter of a day in the solar year. As we said earlier, however, the
solar year is just about 365 ¼ days long, but not exactly! The exact length of
a solar year is actually 11 minutes and 14 seconds less than 365 ¼ days. That
means that even if you add a leap day every four years, the calendar would
still overshoot the solar year by a little bit—11 minutes and 14 seconds per
year. These minutes and seconds really start to add up: after 128 years, the
calendar would gain an entire extra day. So, the leap year rule, "add a
leap year every four years" was a good rule, but not good enough!
Calendar Correction, Part II
To rectify the situation, the creators
of our calendar (the Gregorian calendar, introduced in 1582) decided to omit
leap years three times every four hundred years. This would shorten the
calendar every so often and rid it of the annual excess of 11 minutes and 14
seconds. So in addition to the rule that a leap year occurs every four years, a
new rule was added: a century year is not a leap year unless it is evenly
divisible by 400. This rule manages to eliminate three leap years every few
hundred years.
It's Smooth Sailing for the Next 3,300 Years
This ingenious correction worked
beautifully in bringing the calendar and the solar year in harmony, pretty much
eliminating those pesky extra 11 minutes and 14 seconds. Now the calendar year
and the solar year are just about a half a minute off. At that rate, it takes
3,300 years for the calendar year and solar year to diverge by a day.
Rules for Determining a Leap Year
1. Most years that can be divided evenly by 4 are leap years.
(For example, 2016 divided by 4 = 504: Leap year!)
2.
Exception: Century years are NOT leap years UNLESS they can be evenly
divided by 400. (For example, 1700, 1800, and 1900 were not leap years, but
1600 and 2000, which are divisible by 400, were.)
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