The Global Positioning System along with the Internet has changed the way we live our lives. Thousands of motorists use them daily to navigate their around the country’s roads while airline pilots and ship’s captains use them for the same purpose on our seas and in our skies.
But GPS has more uses than just navigation as the technology that GPS utilises is based around the atomic clock. Atomic clocks are highly accurate devices, so accurate that within a billion years they will not lose a second in time.
It is this accuracy that allows satellite navigation devices to triangulate the positioning by measuring the time it takes for the GPS signals to arrive. As radio waves, such as those broadcast by the GPS satellites travel at the speed of light, an inaccuracy of just one second could see the positioning device inaccurate by 300,000 km (the speed light travels per second).
This timing signal broadcast by the satellites can also be utilised by a GPS time server. GPS time servers use the atomic clock signal and convert it into UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) which can be used by network time servers.
These time servers are often referred to as a GPS time server as they use GPS as a timing source to synchronise entire computer networks to. GPS signals are highly accurate and available anywhere on the planet.
Richard Hawkesford © 2009
Tags: Atomic Clock, Global Positioning System, GPS, GPS Satellites, Satellite NavigationLeave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.