Today’s “Word of
the Day” is “intercalary.” It refers to a day inserted in the calendar to bring
it into sync with the solar year. That day is today, the 29th of
February, the Leap Day of the Leap Year 2020.
People born on this day, the Leaplings, are special. They get to celebrate their birthday every four years (although some cheat by celebrating three years on the 1st of March and one on the 29th of February) and so make it more special than the yearly birthdays we normal folks celebrate.
People born on this day, the Leaplings, are special. They get to celebrate their birthday every four years (although some cheat by celebrating three years on the 1st of March and one on the 29th of February) and so make it more special than the yearly birthdays we normal folks celebrate.
Everything comes
down to counting. We count a year to consist of 365 days, but the Earth takes a
little longer than that to go around the sun in an elliptical orbit, although,
since the eccentricity is only 0.0167, or almost zero, the orbit is almost
circular. The actual number of days is not 365 but 365.2422 days. Think of that
rather annoying additional decimal day. Why couldn’t the number of days be an integer
instead of a decimal? Because celestial phenomena do not follow the neat
geometry of humans. They follow what they must, according to the laws of
physics.
Still, let’s
approximate and assume that the number of days in a year is 365.25. A day of 0.25 means
quarter of a day, which is 6 hours. So, for three years, we fall short in our
counting by a total of about 18 hours. The solution? Make it 24 hours by the 4th
year and add that extra day to the fourth, that is, the Leap Year, and we are
in sync with the true celestial year, on the average. Except, we are
overcounting the solar year by about 12 minutes on the average per year. The
solution? Normalize these extra minutes by skipping “intercalary” for some of
the Leap Years. Which ones? Those year that are not exactly divisible by 400.
That means the years 1700, 1800 and 1900, although divisible by 4 but not 400,
were not Leap Years. The year 2000 was but not 2010. This year 2020 is but 2030
will not be, and so on.
Except that this calculation
is still not completely right. 365.2422 of a true solar year means 365 days, 5
hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds. So, when we add a day every Leap Year, we are
overcounting the length of the year by (6 hours - 5 hours 48 minutes 46 seconds), that is, 11 minutes and 14 seconds, not 12 minutes. In other
words, the Gregorian Calendar we currently use and adjust with a Leap Day overestimates the average length
of a year by 11 minutes and 14 seconds, not 12 minutes. The correction necessary
is 365.2425 – 365.2422 = 0.0003 days per year, which means another correction
will be necessary in 3,030 years. It is safe to say that most of us will NOT be
around to experience THAT correction!
Transcending these 4th place of decimal correction is, however, this question: What is the probability that a person selected at random from the population will have a 29th of February birthday?
Transcending these 4th place of decimal correction is, however, this question: What is the probability that a person selected at random from the population will have a 29th of February birthday?
Leapling, anyone? |
Well, in 4 years,
there are 4 x 365 days = 1460 days + 1 Leap Day = 1461 days. So the probability
that your spouse, niece or cousin, or anyone, was born on the 29th
of February = 1/1461, which is approximately 0.000684, or about seven hundredths
of 1 percent. So how many people in the world can we expect to have their
birthdays fall on the 29th of February? This expectation value (not the actual number but close, according to laws of probability),
assuming that the population of the world in 2020 is 8 billion, is 1/1461 x 8,000,000,000, or about 5.8 million. In other words, we can expect at
least 5 million Leaplings on the Earth today.
If you are looking
for an ice-breaker at a party, how about this as you hone in on a potential
friend: “Are you a Leapling?” When the response is a puzzled, “Say what?”, you launch
into an explanation of Leap Years, why and how they came about, and how, using probability, you can calculate that there
are over 5 million Leaplings in the world now.
As you look up with
a triumphant smile after your brilliant monologue, you realize with a shock that your "target" has vanished!