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  2. La Crosse Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Crosse_Technology

    La Crosse Technology was founded in 1983 as a grandfather clock distribution company after the founder, Allan McCormick, returned from being stationed in Germany. [ 1 ] La Crosse Technology introduced the radio-controlled clock , commonly (but incorrectly) called an "atomic clock" after the extremely accurate timepiece behind the radio signal ...

  3. Clock drift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_drift

    Even the Earth's rotation rate has more drift and variation in drift than an atomic clock due to tidal acceleration and other effects. The principle behind the atomic clock has enabled scientists to re-define the SI unit second in terms of exactly 9 192 631 770 oscillations of the caesium-133 atom. The precision of these oscillations allows ...

  4. Rubidium standard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubidium_standard

    Commercial rubidium clocks are less accurate than caesium atomic clocks, which serve as primary frequency standards, so a rubidium clock is usually used as a secondary frequency standard. Commercial rubidium frequency standards operate by disciplining a crystal oscillator to the rubidium hyperfine transition of 6.8 GHz (6 834 682 610.904 Hz).

  5. Atomic clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_clock

    The development of atomic clocks has led to many scientific and technological advances such as precise global and regional navigation satellite systems, and applications in the Internet, which depend critically on frequency and time standards. Atomic clocks are installed at sites of time signal radio transmitters. [113]

  6. Dick effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_effect

    The Dick effect (hereinafter; "the effect") is an important limitation to frequency stability for modern atomic clocks such as atomic fountains and optical lattice clocks.It is an aliasing effect: High frequency noise in a required local oscillator (LO) is aliased (heterodyned) to near zero frequency by a periodic interrogation process that locks the frequency of the LO to that of the atoms.

  7. Time synchronization in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_synchronization_in...

    COAA's Radio Clock [21] F6CTE's CLOCK [15] WWVH: 5, 10, and 15 MHz AM Voice with modified IRIG-Hformat time code on 100 Hz sub-carrier (CCIR code) HF radio and antenna (plus software if automatic updating of computer time is desired) TrueTime TL-3 WWV Receiver; CHU: 3.33 MHz, 7.85 MHz, 14.67 MHz Bell 103 modem tones, decodable by most computer ...

  8. Clock synchronization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_synchronization

    Clock synchronization is a topic in computer science and engineering that aims to coordinate otherwise independent clocks. Even when initially set accurately, real clocks will differ after some amount of time due to clock drift , caused by clocks counting time at slightly different rates.

  9. Error analysis for the Global Positioning System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_analysis_for_the...

    Since the atomic clocks on board the GPS satellites are precisely tuned, it makes the system a practical engineering application of the scientific theory of relativity in a real-world environment. [16] Placing atomic clocks on artificial satellites to test Einstein's general theory was proposed by Friedwardt Winterberg in 1955. [17]