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US standards body proposes atomic clocks in lunar orbit to keep Moon time

(2024/08/13)


Researchers at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have come up with a proposal for keeping track of time on the Moon – an essential for lunar navigation tools.

While the Apollo-era astronauts rarely ventured far from their Lunar Module during the precious few days they spent on the lunar surface, NASA's Artemis program aims to establish a sustained human presence on the Moon, which will require accurate timekeeping for a GPS-like navigation system for lunar exploration.

The problem is well known. Atomic clocks on the Moon's surface tick faster than those on Earth by approximately 56 microseconds per day (other sources put the average as 58.7 microseconds). Initially, this is not a problem… unless accurate landings and decent bandwidth for communicating with Earth are required.

[1]

[2]In April , NASA was directed to implement a Coordinated Lunar Time (LTC) for the Moon, which would be traceable to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). However, there was precious little detail on how the standard might be implemented.

[3]

[4]

[5]NIST's approach is to implement a "highly precise network of clocks at specific locations on the Moon’s surface and in lunar orbits."

According to NIST: "These precise atomic clocks in lunar orbit would function as the 'satellites' of the lunar GPS network, providing accurate timing signals for navigation."

[6]

The system will result in a lunar time that accounts for the Moon's gravitational environment and provides a master 'Moon Time' that will serve a similar purpose to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) on Earth.

NIST physicist Bijunath Patla said: "It's like having the entire Moon synchronized to one 'time zone' adjusted for the Moon's gravity, rather than having clocks gradually drift out of sync with Earth's time."

[7]Report slams Boeing and NASA over shoddy quality that's delayed SLS blastoff

[8]Evidence for Moon caves emerges as humans hunt for hospitable hideaway under lunar surface

[9]Time Lords decree: No leap second needed in 2024

[10]Boffins suggest astronauts should build a Wall of Death on the Moon

Accurate timing signals mean a lunar GPS is possible, which means more efficient exploration. Patla said the eventual goal was to get accuracy within just a few meters when landing spacecraft.

NASA has footed part of the bill for the work, and a longer-term goal is to apply the lessons learned to timekeeping on missions farther afield.

"The proposed framework underpinning lunar coordinate time could eventually enable exploration beyond the Moon and even beyond our solar system," said Patla.

[11]

"Once humans develop the capability for such ambitious missions, of course," he added. ®

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[2] https://www.theregister.com/2024/04/03/coordinated_lunar_time/

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[5] https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2024/08/what-time-it-moon

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[7] https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/09/nasa_boeing_sls/

[8] https://www.theregister.com/2024/07/15/evidence_for_moon_caves_emerges/

[9] https://www.theregister.com/2024/07/05/iers_decrees_no_leap_second/

[10] https://www.theregister.com/2024/05/03/astronauts_exercise_moon/

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[12] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/



Made me think of this video

Flightmode

"I'm not gonna try and do accents... I just should not do accents."

If you know you know.

Neurons for Kryton

If implemented, NASA won't be using it anytime soon. China however will be saying, 'Thanks for all the fish !'

GPS?

User McUser

Surely it's L PS, yeah?

Re: GPS?

KittenHuffer

If it was E PS [Earth Positioning System] then I would not be able to disagree with you. But it is a Global Positioning System, and as far as I was aware the Moon is also a Globe!

----------> The Pedants are revolting, My Lord!

Dorkalicious

A precise timing source will also be valuable when it comes to deploying a Lunar cellular network, as you need to ensure the cells and core agree on 'the time' to stay in sync and provide high data throughput rates.

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