Origin The word "tropical" comes from the
Greek tropikos meaning "turn". Thus, the tropics of
Cancer and
Capricorn mark the extreme north and south
latitudes where the Sun can appear directly overhead, and where it appears to "turn" in its annual seasonal motion. Because of this connection between the tropics and the seasonal cycle of the apparent position of the Sun, the word "tropical" was lent to the period of the seasonal cycle. The early Chinese, Hindus, Greeks, and others made approximate measures of the tropical year.
Early value, precession discovery In the 2nd century BC,
Hipparchus measured the time required for the Sun to travel from an
equinox to the same equinox again. He reckoned the length of the year to be 1/300 of a day less than 365.25 days (365 days, 5 hours, 55 minutes, 12 seconds, or 365.24667 days). Hipparchus used this method because he was better able to detect the time of the equinoxes, compared to that of the solstices. Hipparchus also discovered that the equinoctial points moved along the
ecliptic (plane of the Earth's orbit, or what Hipparchus would have thought of as the plane of the Sun's orbit about the Earth) in a direction opposite that of the movement of the Sun, a phenomenon that came to be named "precession of the equinoxes". He reckoned the value as 1° per century, a value that was not improved upon until about 1000 years later, by
Islamic astronomers. Since this discovery, a distinction has been made between the tropical year and the
sidereal year.
Middle Ages and the Renaissance During the Middle Ages and Renaissance, several progressively better tables were published that allowed computation of the positions of the Sun,
Moon and
planets relative to the fixed stars. An important application of these tables was the
reform of the calendar. The
Alfonsine Tables, published in 1252, were based on the theories of
Ptolemy and were revised and updated after the original publication. The length of the tropical year was given as 365 solar days, 5 hours, 49 minutes, 16 seconds (≈ 365.24255 days). This length was used in devising the
Gregorian calendar of 1582. In
Uzbekistan,
Ulugh Beg's
Zij-i Sultani was published in 1437 and gave an estimate of 365 solar days, 5 hours, 49 minutes, 15 seconds (365.242535 days). In the 16th century,
Copernicus put forward a
heliocentric cosmology. Erasmus Reinhold used Copernicus' theory to compute the
Prutenic Tables in 1551, and gave a tropical year length of 365 solar days, 5 hours, 55 minutes, 58 seconds (365.24720 days), based on the length of a
sidereal year and the presumed rate of precession. This was actually less accurate than the earlier value of the Alfonsine Tables. Major advances in the 17th century were made by
Johannes Kepler and
Isaac Newton. In 1609 and 1619, Kepler published his three laws of planetary motion. In 1627, Kepler used the observations of
Tycho Brahe and Waltherus to produce the most accurate tables up to that time, the
Rudolphine Tables. He evaluated the mean tropical year as 365 solar days, 5 hours, 48 minutes, 45 seconds (365.24219 days). Newton's three laws of dynamics and theory of gravity were published in his
Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica in 1687. Newton's theoretical and mathematical advances influenced tables by
Edmond Halley published in 1693 and 1749 and provided the underpinnings of all solar system models until
Albert Einstein's theory of
General relativity in the 20th century.
18th and 19th century From the time of Hipparchus and Ptolemy, the year was based on two equinoxes (or two solstices) some years apart, to average out both observational errors and periodic variations (caused by the gravitational pull of the planets, and the small effect of
nutation on the equinox). These effects did not begin to be understood until Newton's time. To model short-term variations of the time between equinoxes (and prevent them from confounding efforts to measure long-term variations) requires precise observations and an elaborate theory of the apparent motion of the Sun. The necessary theories and mathematical tools came together in the 18th century due to the work of
Pierre-Simon de Laplace,
Joseph Louis Lagrange, and other specialists in
celestial mechanics. They were able to compute periodic variations and separate them from the gradual mean motion. They could express the
mean longitude of the Sun in a polynomial such as: :
L0 =
A0 +
A1
T +
A2
T2 days where
T is the time in Julian centuries. The derivative of this formula is an expression of the mean angular velocity, and the inverse of this gives an expression for the length of the tropical year as a linear function of
T. Two equations are given in the table. Both equations estimate that the tropical year gets roughly a half-second shorter each century. Newcomb's tables were sufficiently accurate that they were used by the joint American-British
Astronomical Almanac for the Sun,
Mercury,
Venus, and
Mars through 1983.
20th and 21st centuries The length of the mean tropical year is derived from a model of the Solar System, so any advance that improves the solar system model potentially improves the accuracy of the mean tropical year. Many new observing instruments became available, including • artificial satellites • tracking of deep space probes such as
Pioneer 4 beginning in 1959 •
radars able to measure the distance to other planets beginning in 1961 •
lunar laser ranging since the 1969
Apollo 11 left the first of a series of
retroreflectors which allow greater accuracy than reflectorless measurements • artificial satellites such as
LAGEOS (1976) and the
Global Positioning System (initial operation in 1993) •
very long baseline interferometry which finds precise directions to
quasars in distant
galaxies, and allows determination of the Earth's orientation with respect to these objects whose distance is so great they can be considered to show minimal space motion. The complexity of the model used for the Solar System must be limited to the available computational facilities. In the 1920s, punched card equipment came into use by L. J. Comrie in Britain. For the
American Ephemeris an electromagnetic computer, the
IBM Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator was used since 1948. When modern computers became available, it was possible to compute ephemerides using
numerical integration rather than general theories; numerical integration came into use in 1984 for the joint US-UK almanacs.
Albert Einstein's
General Theory of Relativity provided a more accurate theory, but the accuracy of theories and observations did not require the refinement provided by this theory (except for the advance of the perihelion of Mercury) until 1984. Time scales incorporated general relativity beginning in the 1970s. A key development in understanding the tropical year over long periods of time is the discovery that the rate of rotation of the Earth, or equivalently, the length of the
mean solar day, is not constant. William Ferrel in 1864 and
Charles-Eugène Delaunay in 1865 predicted that the rotation of the Earth is being retarded by tides. This could be verified by observation only in the 1920s with the very accurate
Shortt–Synchronome clock and later in the 1930s when
quartz clocks began to replace pendulum clocks as time standards. == Time scales and calendar ==