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Secular variation

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The secular variation of a time series is its long-term, non-periodic variation (see Decomposition of time series). Whether a variation is perceived as secular or not depends on the available timescale: a variation that is secular over a timescale of centuries may be a segment of what is, over a timescale of millions of years, a periodic variation. Natural quantities often have both periodic and secular variations. Secular variation is sometimes called secular trend or secular drift when the emphasis is on a linear long-term trend.

The term is used wherever time series are applicable in history, economics, operations research, biological anthropology, and astronomy (particularly celestial mechanics) such as VSOP (planets).

Etymology

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The word secular, from the Latin root saecularis ("of an age, occurring once in an age"),[1] has two basic meanings: I. Of or pertaining to the world (from which secularity is derived), and II. Of or belonging to an age or long period. The latter use appeared in the 18th century in the sense of "living or lasting for an age or ages". In the 19th century terms like secular acceleration and secular variation appeared in astronomy, and similar language was used in economics by 1895.[2]

Astronomy

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In astronomy, secular variations are distinguished from periodic phenomena. In particular, astronomical ephemerides use secular to label the longest duration or non-oscillatory perturbations in the motion of planets, contrasted with periodic perturbations which exhibit repetition over the course of a given time frame. In this context it is referred to as secular motion. Solar System ephemerides are essential for the navigation of spacecraft and for all kinds of space observations of the planets, their natural satellites, stars and galaxies.

Most of the known perturbations to motion in stable, regular, and well-determined dynamical systems tend to be periodic at some level, but in many-body systems, chaotic dynamics result in some effects which are unidirectional (for example, planetary migration).

Solar System

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Secular phenomena create variations in the orbits of the Moon and the planets. The solar emission spectrum and the solar wind follow secular trends due to migration through the galactic plane. Consensus has determined these to have been among the smallest of factors to influence climate and extinction during human evolution, dwarfed by complex solar cycles and magnetic cycles.

Moon

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The secular acceleration of the Moon depends on tidal forces. It was discovered early but it was some time before it was correctly explained.[3]

Earth

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Depending on the time frame, perturbations can appear secular even if they are actually periodic. An example of this is the precession of the Earth's axis considered over the time frame of a few hundred or thousand years. When viewed in this timeframe the so-called "precession of the equinoxes" can appear to be a secular phenomenon since the axial precession takes 25771.5 years. Thus monitoring it over a much smaller timeframe appears to simply result in a "drift" of the position of the equinox in the plane of the ecliptic of approximately one degree per 71.6 years,[4] influencing the Milankovitch cycles.[5]

Planets

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Secular variation also refers to long-term trends in the orbits of all of the planets. Several attempts have from time to time been undertaken to analyze and predict such gravitational deviations for planets, observing ordinary satellite orbits. Others are referred to as post-keplerian effects.

Variations Séculaires des Orbites Planétaires (VSOP) is a modern numerical model[6] that tries to address the problem.

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In economics market trends are the upward or downward movement of a market, during a period of time and in the financial field are classified as secular, primary and secondary for long, medium and short time frames.[7]

Geomagnetic secular variation

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Geomagnetic secular variation refers to some changes in the Earth's magnetic field. The field has variations on timescales from milliseconds to millions of years – its rapid ones mostly come from currents in the ionosphere and magnetosphere. The secular variations are those over periods of a year or more, reflecting changes in the Earth's core. Phenomena associated with these include geomagnetic jerk, westward drift and geomagnetic reversals.[8]

Biological anthropology

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A secular trend, widely tapered off and in some places ended, in which case a discrete developmental shift, has been found to apply across the continents in the average age of onset of puberty (menarche/first menstruation and beginning of breast development) of girls from the 1940s to 2010s: beginning roughly 4 months earlier per decade. This is largely believed to be caused by nutritional changes in children over time.[9][10][11][12][13]

References

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  1. ^ "secular (adj.)". Etymology Online.
  2. ^ "secular, adj. and n.". Oxford English Dictionary.
  3. ^ Jyri B. Kolesnik; Revision of the tidal acceleration of the Moon and the tidal deceleration of the Earth's rotation from historical optical observations of planets, in ISBN 2-901057-45-4 (2001) pp. 231–234.
  4. ^ Lowrie, William (2004). Fundamentals of Geophysics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-46164-1.
  5. ^ Jurij B. Kolesnik; A new approach to interpretation of the non-precessional equinox motion, in Journées 2000 – systèmes de référence spatio-temporels. J2000, a fundamental epoch for origins of reference systems and astronomical models, Paris, Septembre 2000, edited by N. Capitaine, Observatoire de Paris (2001), pp. 119–120. ISBN 2-901057-45-4
  6. ^ Bretagnon, P. (1982). "Théorie du mouvement de l'ensemble des planètes. Solution VSOP82". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 114: 278–288. Bibcode:1982A&A...114..278B.
  7. ^ Edwards, R.; McGee, J.; Bessetti, W. H. C. (2007). Technical Analysis of Stock Trends. CRC Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-8493-3772-7.
  8. ^ Merrill, Ronald T.; McElhinny, Michael W.; McFadden, Phillip L. (1996). The Magnetic Field of the Earth: Paleomagnetism, the Core, and the Deep Mantle. International Geophysics Series. Vol. 63. Academic Press. ISBN 9780124912458.
  9. ^ Okasha, M; McCarron, P; McEwen, J; Smith, GD (2001). "Age at menarche: secular trends and association with adult anthropometric measures". Annals of Human Biology. 28 (1): 68–78. doi:10.1080/03014460150201896. PMID 11201332.
  10. ^ Wattigney, WA; Srinivasan, SR; Chen, W; Greenlund, KJ; Berenson, GS (1999). "Secular trend of earlier onset of menarche with increasing obesity in black and white girls: the Bogalusa Heart Study". Ethnicity & Disease. 9 (2): 181–189. PMID 10421080.
  11. ^ Prentice, S; Fulford, AJ; Jarjou, LM; Goldberg, GR; Prentice, A (2010). "Evidence for a downward secular trend in age of menarche in a rural Gambian population". Annals of Human Biology. 37 (5): 717–721. doi:10.3109/03014461003727606. PMC 3575631. PMID 20465526.
  12. ^ Biro, Frank; Galvez, MP; Greenspan, LC; Succop, PA; Vangeepuram, N (Sep 2010), "Pubertal assessment method and baseline characteristics in a mixed longitudinal study of girls", Pediatrics, 126 (3): e583–90, doi:10.1542/peds.2009-3079, PMC 4460992, PMID 20696727
  13. ^ Euling, Susan; Herman-Giddens, Marcia; Lee, Peter; Selevan, Sherry (February 2008). "Examination of US Puberty-Timing Data from 1940 to 1994 for Secular Trends: Panel Findings". Pediatrics. 121 (3).