Mysterious boost to Earth's spin will make today one of the shortest days on record

a globe spinning against a green background.
Scientists don't know why Earth's spin is speeding up. (Image credit: the_burtons via Getty Images)

The days are getting shorter and not just because summer is waning in the Northern Hemisphere.

On Tuesday, Aug. 5, Earth's solar day will be ever so slightly shorter than usual 24 hours, according to Timeanddate.com, making it not only one of the shortest days of 2025, but also since records began.

At just 1.25 milliseconds under the 86,400-second mark, it won't be noticeable, but it's part of a puzzling trend that's baffling scientists: Earth is spinning faster. After decades of slowing down, our planet's rotation has been speeding up in recent years — and timekeepers have no definitive explanation.

To understand what's going on, it helps to define what a day is. Earth's true rotational period — one full 360-degree rotation relative to the background stars — lasts 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4.1 seconds, according to EarthSky. That's a sidereal day — and it explains why stars and planets appear to rise in the east about four minutes earlier each day, and why the night sky changes through the seasons. After all, Earth is traveling along its orbital path around the sun while it rotates.

But the 24-hour day we live by is a solar day, measured not against the stars, but against just one, the sun. A day is therefore measured from noon to noon, equal to 24 hours, or 86,400 seconds. It's that measurement that appears to be mysteriously shorter than it should be.

There are three dates in 2025 when scientists predicted the Earth's solar day would be shorter than 24 hours — July 9 (1.23 milliseconds less than 24 hours), July 22 (1.36 milliseconds) and Aug. 5. However, the shortest ever was 1.66 milliseconds less than 24 hours on July 5, 2024.

Since official records began in 1973, Earth's solar day has been steadily lengthening, mostly due to the moon. As it orbits Earth, the moon generates friction, causing its orbital path to drift farther outward. As it does so, Earth's rotational energy is transferred to the moon, which causes Earth's rotation to slow — and, therefore, the days to lengthen.

Similarly, it's the moon's exact position that helps scientists pinpoint July 9, July 22 and August 5 as the exact days that Earth will experience a quicker solar day. On those three dates, variations in the moon's position relative to Earth's equator — particularly its declination — can influence tidal forces that subtly affect Earth's rotation rate.

If the moon causes short-term fluctuations in the speed of Earth's rotation, the underlying reasons for its increased rotation speed in recent years are less understood. Although it's been suggested that global warming may be having an effect, the root cause of the acceleration is more likely to be the slower rotation of Earth's liquid core, causing the rest of the planet to spin faster.

You won't notice the changes in Earth's rotation on August 5, but if the situation continues through 2029, a so-called negative leap second could be added — for the first time ever.

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Jamie Carter
Contributing Writer

Jamie is an experienced science, technology and travel journalist and stargazer who writes about exploring the night sky, solar and lunar eclipses, moon-gazing, astro-travel, astronomy and space exploration. He is the editor of WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com and author of A Stargazing Program For Beginners, and is a senior contributor at Forbes. His special skill is turning tech-babble into plain English.

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    1. Comment by Jeoux Legrand.

      I'm not say it was the Aliens... But, it was the Aliens.

      • Comment by Phil.

        Either the 3 Gorges Dam is slowing the earth's rotation or the rotation is speeding up. Pick a lane because both cannot be true.

        • Comment by davidletsch.

          I just read all of these comments, while some seem intelligent minded I'm afraid everyone is thinking about individual trees and not the forest. The global warming comment was kinda right but for the wrong reason. The planet would normally be cooling after formation. The energy in our system. Mass is also energy. Energy is increasing not declining due to the system not being able to cool. Green house gasses catch and store more energy. If our total mass/energy goes up we spin faster. If the total goes down then we'll start slowing down. That is the big picture. Secondly the moons influence also plays a role in this equation along with solar maximum and minimums. My explanation is the large answer, not the detailed equations that would be required to measure all of the different contributing causes that make one day shorter and longer, mostly related to angle of the earth and the gravitational deflection of the moon relative to all the celestial bodies involved in those equations. We have a tremendous amount of nuclear material in the earth's core and adding the extra heat from the surface keeps the interior from venting heat. If the energy can't be vented, then the energy gets expressed in the speed of the surface relative to the speed of the core. So climate change is the largest contributing factor. Here's your experiment. Put a bottle of soda and a bottle of water outside on a sunny day. Then measure the temp of each over several hours. The soda will get hotter & get hotter faster then the water. Thats what is driving climate change. Everyone can leave their politics in the garbage. This is science. Terrible facts are always better then happy beliefs. Welcome to your simulation.

          • Comment by samourian.

            It was probably from that recent tsunami and earthquake which set off a volcano that was dormant in Russia for 6oo years. It must have slowed sped up the spin of the earth and tilted Earth off its axes just like the Japanese tsunami that happened several years earlier.

            • Reply by Webb.

              This shortened day was predicted and expected long in advance of the recent tsunami and earthquake.

          • Comment by dribalz.

            What is not explained in the article is how they know AHEAD of time that this will occur. What gives them that information? Can they then confirm that the actual event happened after that day passes?

            • Reply by Hevach.

              We know ahead of time because it is NOT a mystery. It's a tidal effect that happens twice every orbit of the moon (when the moon is at its farthest from the equator) which can have greater or lesser effects depending on where other factors of the Earth-Moon-Sun arrangement are. This is why there was another one just two weeks ago, and will be another one in two weeks (though not as short).

            • Reply by Webb.

              Read much?

              "... the moon's exact position that helps scientists pinpoint July 9, July 22 and August 5 as the exact days that Earth will experience a quicker solar day. On those three dates, variations in the moon's position relative to Earth's equator — particularly its declination — can influence tidal forces that subtly affect Earth's rotation rate."

          • Comment by chef242don.

            Could it be August 5th is my 90th birthday? I don't see any correlation, but stranger things have happened in space stranger things have happened in space, i.e. The Twilight Zone, right?

            • Comment by Meteoric Marmot.

              "A day is therefore measured from noon to noon, equal to 24 hours, or 86,400 seconds."

              Nope. 24 hours is the average length of the day. The actual time it takes the Earth to rotate from "noon" (sun overhead) to the next noon depends on where the Earth is in its slightly elliptical orbit. Kepler's 2nd law of planetary motion says:

              A line segment joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler%27s_laws_of_planetary_motion

              What this means is that when the Earth is closest to the sun (aphelion, ~January 4), it has to travel farther around its orbit in order to sweep out equal area. As a result, it has to rotate further in order for the sun to be overhead. It also means that it travels faster than at any other point in its orbit. This makes January 4 (+- a day or so) the longest day of the year as well as the "fastest."

              • Comment by José Veinte Genario -NISU.

                A possibility is that the added weight from water in dams will make terrain below go deeper, a shorter rotation radius means momentum will be changed into faster rotation. Or not?

                • Reply by Meteoric Marmot.

                  Storing water in dams definitely changes the weight distribution of the crust, but the additional deflection of the crust is minimal. Since most of that water would be in the oceans instead of held at higher terrain, this causes a minuscule change in the polar moment of inertia. Is that enough to have a measurable effect? I don't know.

              • Comment by Travel Abroad.

                I lost 16 pounds on Monday! And here I was thinking the diet was working LOL

                • Comment by Real.Science.

                  Global warming, Really??

                  Global warming melts the ice caps which moves mass from the poles to the equator thereby slowing the rotation.

                  Making this type of assertion is why people question "science."

                  • Reply by chef242don.

                    Oops! For 3 days.

                  • Reply by Tony Schumacher-Jones.

                    But I thought that we can in fact check on what historical weather patterns have been by deep ice samples for example? No?