(Redirected from IERS)

The IERS logo
:''"IERS" redirects here: for other uses, see
IERS (disambiguation)''
The 'International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service' is the body responsible for maintaining global
time and
reference frame standards, notably through its
Earth Orientation Parameter (EOP) and
International Celestial Reference System (ICRS) groups.
Among its other functions, the IERS is responsible for announcing
leap seconds.
The organization was formerly known as 'International Earth Rotation Service' until
April 2,
2002 when it formally changed its name. The organization chose to retain the acronym 'IERS'.
The Sub-bureau for Rapid Service and Predictions of Earth Orientation Parameters of the IERS, located at the
United States Naval Observatory, monitors the
Earth's rotation. Part of its mission involves the determination of a time scale based on the current rate of the rotation of the Earth. Other services of IERS are at the
Paris Observatory.
UT1 is the non-uniform time based on the Earth's rotation.
See also
★
International Atomic Time
★
Coordinated Universal Time
★
International Terrestrial Reference System
★
International Celestial Reference System
★
International Celestial Reference Frame
★
Earth rotation,
ΔT
External link
★
Official website