Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Radio clock

Encyclopedia : R : RA : RAD : Radio clock


A radio clock
Enlarge
A radio clock

A radio clock is a clock that is synchronized by a time code bit stream transmitted by a radio transmitter connected to a time standard such as an atomic clock. The picture shows a type of radio controlled digital clock. With special mechanism, radio controlled analog clocks are also available.

A radio controlled clock consists of an antenna for intercepting the RF time code signal, a receiving circuit to convert the time code RF signal into digital time code, and a controller circuit to decode the time code bit streams and to drive an output circuit which can be LCD in case of digital clocks or stepping motors in case of analog clocks.

Operation

Radio clocks depend on time signal radio stations, which usually have the following attributes: A variety of frequencies helps reception no matter what the ionospheric weather.

Terrestrial time signals

Radio clocks synchronized to terrestrial time signals can usually achieve an accuracy of around 1 millisecond relative to the time standard, generally limited by uncertainties and variability in radio propagation.

Time signals that can be used as references for radio clocks include:

Loran Clocks

Loran-C time signals may also be used for radio clock synchronization, by augmenting their highly accurate frequency transmissions with external measurements of the offsets of LORAN navigation signals against time standards.

GPS clocks

Many modern radio clocks use the GPS satellite positioning system to provide more accurate time than can be obtained from these terrestrial radio stations. These GPS clocks combine time estimates from multiple satellite atomic clocks with error estimates maintained by a network of ground stations. Because they compute the time and position simultaneously from readings from several sources, GPS clocks can automatically compensate for line-of-sight delay and many radio propagation defects, and can achieve sub-microsecond accuracy under ideal conditions. GPS units intended primarily for time measurement as opposed to navigation can be set to assume the antenna position is fixed; in this mode the device will average its position fixes so that after a day or so of operation it will know its position to within a few meters. Once it has averaged its position, it can then determine accurate time even if it can only pick up signals from one or two satellites. The highest-quality GPS clocks have their own precision clocks -- either an atomic clock or a temperature-controlled crystal clock -- so they can maintain accurate time during any interruption of GPS signals.

Note that although any GPS receiver that is performing its primary navigational function must have an internal time reference accurate to a small fraction of a second, the displayed time on most consumer GPS units may not be as exact. This is because an inexpensive GPS unit typically has one CPU that is multitasking; the highest-priority task for the CPU is maintaining satellite lock, while updating the display gets the lowest priority. Therefore, the displayed time of most consumer handheld GPS units will be accurate to around half a second.

GPS, Galileo and GLONASS: These satellite navigation systems, have caesium or rubidium atomic clocks on each satellite, rated from clocks on the ground. Some navigation units can serve as local time standards, with an accuracy of about one microsecond.

However, GPS clocks are dependent on the goodwill of the United States for the operation of the GPS satellite constellation. This is not acceptable for many critical non-US civilian and military systems, although it may be acceptable for many civilian purposes, as it is assumed by most users that the civilian GPS signal would not be switched off except in the event of a global crisis of unprecedented proportions.

The planned establishment of the Galileo positioning system by the EU (expected to be fully operational in 2010) is intended to provide a second source of time for GPS-compatible clocks that are also equipped to receive and decode the Galileo signals.

The radio frequencies are set by the clocks and are a precision standard, useful for adjusting receivers.

Other access

In the era when national broadcasting networks operated over point-to-point terrestrial microwave links, the time announcements were very accurate. Today, however, satellite and digital networks often have latencies on the order of a half second or a second. In places where a car radio can receive more than one station broadcasting the same national news program, when switching between them one often either misses part of a word or hears part of the same word twice due to such variations.

Also, once upon a time every radio station had a local full-time engineer who took considerable pride in keeping their clocks accurate; today many stations do not care as much about such details. Some stations still do provide highly accurate time beeps, such as WTIC (noted below), or WCBS AM 88 in New York City.

CDMA clocks are increasingly popular for providing reference time to computer networks; their accuracy is nearly as good as GPS, but since the signal comes from a nearby cell phone base station rather than a distant satellite, a CDMA clock will work better inside buildings. So in many cases, when a GPS reference clock would require installing the antenna on the outside wall of the building, a CDMA clock can eliminate the requirement for the outdoor antenna.

On the dates when civil time changes, time-related sites on the Internet are often very slow to respond due to heavy usage; it is therefore wise to check one's clocks a day or two before the seasonal time change will occur.


Time signal stations
 BPM | CHU | DCF77 | GPS Technology | HBG | JJY | MSF | RWM | VNG | WWV | WWVB | WWVH | YVTO 

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: