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The question of how many seconds per second time flows (or one advances through it) is obviously an absurd one, for it suggests that the flow or advance comprises a rate of change with respect to something else to a sort of hypertime.
As Price remarks, "We might just as well say that the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter flows at π seconds per second!" Tim Maudlin (2007) has replied to Price that the rate of one second per second is a perfectly fine rate.
They also made a theoretical estimate of the necessary spin down rate to be 1 seconds per second.
Backer et al. revised their estimate of the upper limit of the spin down rate just a month after the initial discovery, to 1 seconds per second, but the currently measured value is more nearly in line with the theoretical estimate, at 1.05 seconds per second.
When Backer et al. reported their finding in November 1982, they found that the rotation period of PSR B1937+21 was decreasing at a rate of 3 seconds per second.
Start out by trying to rest for 3 seconds per second of running (90 seconds after a 30 second sprint).
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(The value of the acceleration caused by gravity at the Earth's surface is about 32.2 feet per second per second, or 9.8 metres per second per second).
For example, if velocity is expressed in metres per second, acceleration will be expressed in metres per second per second.
At Earth's surface the acceleration of gravity is about 9.8 metres (32 feet) per second per second.
For the purpose of identifying hazard hotspots, values of 2 meters per second per second and less were excluded from analysis.
For Global Earthquake Hazard Distribution-peak ground acceleration, it was decided that those points where the pga was 2 meters per second per second or less would be excluded.
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