To answer the OPs question directly - no....
But for those interested, lets throw some science into this.
As we know there are many ways and reasons to aerate. The timing of it can vary wildly too based on a clubs golf schedule, the amount of aeration needed, the need for revenue, etc. the list goes on.
I just aerated last week in east central PA. It has taken me a number of years to switch to this date but it is making a huge difference. Aeration is a nuisance for everyone - not just the golfer but it is a PITA for superintendents to rip up the course and then heal it back up. I often find the idea of it funny, in that, we aerate to remove organic material (as well as for the benefits of aeration), only to fertilize the hell out of it to recover quickly and therefore start the cycle again - but that's for another day.
The issue is soil temperatures. Most cool season turfgrass starts to actively grow when the average soil temperatures are consistently above 55F and ideally above 60F. Poa annua is a winter annual so it will start to grow earlier than bentgrass, which likes the warmer soil temperatures. Soil based greens are generally slower to heat up but will retain heat better than a sand based green - in which the soil temperature can vary a lot over the day. This is why you might see fairways heal quicker than greens (although the longer height of the grass helps too).
I used to aerate mid April as it was "the time" where the weather was usually ok and the season hadn't really started yet, but over the last number of years that got pushed earlier and earlier - which I liked as it was out of the way, but then we would run into recovery issues. Over (at least) the last 5 years, we have had a warm spell in early spring which would get them to recover to about 70% and then the cold would hit again, drop soil temps (not being helped by now having holes to transfer the cold into the soil quicker) and the bentgrass would shutdown or at least growth would really slow up. When this happened, the greens would just sit there until the soil temperatures got to a point where the bentgrass was happily growing - which was generally mid may. I had a climatologist friend provide the soil temp records for the last 1,5,10,30 & 50 years and all of them showed that there were consistent soil temperatures above 60F by May 15th.
Due to those weather patterns of warmish for a spell in spring and then a cool down, we had far from perfect greens for at least 6-10 weeks each spring as they slowly healed and then another 2 in August (which incidentally was moved back from after Labor day years ago for the same reason). So over the course of a year, the greens were "not good" from anywhere from 6-12 weeks in season. Moving the aeration dates to when the plants are actively growing, greatly reduces the healing time, so the result being that the total downtime is reduced to ~4 weeks a year.
The biggest complaint was that the spring and fall aeration dates are now too close together but it is a win/win when the down time is minimized. We had frost two days last week, the night time temperatures have been lower than normal (which I'm ok with), and combined with the fact we haven't had rain in over 4 weeks, means that conditions haven't been completely ideal for recovery, but 10 days out and the greens are 85% healed and now rolling smooth and fast, and they should be back to normal by day 14/15. We had to adjust the golf schedule a little to accommodate it but it was fine due to having perfect greens for the last 8 weeks. I heard so many comments about how good they were and "I don't ever remember them being this good in the spring before" - well that was because they were always torn up or recovering in spring...
Doing it with the warmer soil temps helps favor bentgrass over poa as the bentgrass is more competitive when it is actively growing. This means it can heal in quicker before a poa plant can sneak in. I know there are a lot of courses aerating in the off season, but again, personally I do not like this as once the soil temperature drops in the fall/winter, the recovery slows, eventually stopping and will not actively start again until - well - May 15th.... Ok thats a bit of a stretch but you get the idea. I have been told I'm wrong in that the timing does not affect poa encroachment, but from experience I still beg to differ.
Like everything in turf, this is not a one size fits all due to soils, turf type, golf schedules, aggressiveness of the aeration etc etc but doing a spring aeration in mid may in the mid Atlantic makes sense as it minimizes the recovery period and therefore the inconvenience to play.