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TIME AND SPACE
ESA sets clock by distant spinning stars
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Jan 01, 2019

Massive stars end their lives with a bang: exploding as spectacular supernovas, they release huge amounts of mass and energy into space. These explosions sweep up any surrounding material, creating bubble remnants that expand into interstellar space. At the heart of bubbles like these are small, dense neutron stars or black holes, the remains of what once shone brightly as a star. Full caption

ESA's technical centre in the Netherlands has begun running a pulsar-based clock. The 'PulChron' system measures the passing of time using millisecond-frequency radio pulses from multiple fast-spinning neutron stars.

Operating since the end of November, this pulsar-based timing system is hosted in the Galileo Timing and Geodetic Validation Facility of ESA's ESTEC establishment, at Noordwijk in the Netherlands, and relies on ongoing observations by a five-strong array of radio telescopes across Europe.

Neutron stars are the densest form of observable matter in the cosmos, formed out of the collapsed core of exploding stars. Tiny in cosmic terms, on the order of a dozen kilometres in diameter, they still have a higher mass than Earth's Sun.

A pulsar is a type of rapidly rotating neutron star with a magnetic field that emits a beam of radiation from its pole. Because of their spin - kept steady by their extreme density - pulsars as seen from Earth appear to emit highly regular radio bursts - so much so that in 1967 their discoverer, UK astronomer Jocelyn Bell Burnell, initially considered they might be evidence of 'little green men'.

"PulChron aims to demonstrate the effectiveness of a pulsar-based timescale for the generation and monitoring of satellite navigation timing in general, and Galileo System Time in particular," explains navigation engineer Stefano Binda, overseeing the PulChron project.

"A timescale based on pulsar measurements is typically less stable than one using atomic or optical clocks in the short term but it could be competitive in the very long term, over several decades or more, beyond the working life of any individual atomic clock.

"In addition, this pulsar time scale works quite independently of whatever atomic clock technology is employed - it doesn't rely on switches between atomic energy states but the rotation of neutron stars."

PulChron sources batches of pulsar measurements from the five 100-m class radio telescopes comprising the European Pulsar Timing Array - the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope in the Netherlands, Germany's Effelsberg Radio Telescope, the Lovell Telescope in the UK, France's Nancay Radio Telescope and the Sardinia Radio Telescope in Italy.

This multinational effort monitors 18 highly precise pulsars in the European sky to search out any timing anomalies, potential evidence of gravitational waves - fluctuations in the fabric of spacetime caused by powerful cosmic events.

For PulChron, these radio telescope measurements are used to steer the output of an active hydrogen maser atomic clock with equipment based in the Galileo Timing and Geodetic Validation Facility - combining its extreme short- and medium-term stability with the longer-term reliability of the pulsars. A 'paper clock' record is also generated out of the measurements, for subsequent post-processing checks.

ESA established the Timing and Geodetic Validation Facility in the early days of the Galileo programme, first to prepare for ESA's two GIOVE test satellites and then in support of the world-spanning Galileo system, based on 'Galileo System Time' which needs to remain accurate to a few billionths of a second. The Facility continues to serve as an independent yardstick of Galileo performance, linked to monitoring stations across the globe, as well as a tool for anomaly investigation.

Stefano adds: "The TGVF provided a perfect opportunity to host the PulChron because it is capable of integrating such new elements with little effort, and has a long tradition in time applications, having been used even to synchronise time and frequency offset of the Galileo satellites themselves."

PulChron's accuracy is being monitored down to a few billionths of a second using ESA's adjacent UTC Laboratory, which harnesses three such atomic hydrogen maser clocks plus a trio of caesium clocks to produce a highly-stable timing signal, contributing to the setting of Coordinated Universal Time, UTC - the world's time.

The gradual diversion of pulsar time from ESTEC's UTC time can therefore be tracked - anticipated at a rate of around 200 trillionths of a second daily.

This project is supported through ESA's Navigation Innovation and Support Programme (NAVISP), applying ESA's hard-won expertise from Galileo and Europe's EGNOS satellite augmentation system to new satellite navigation and - more widely - positioning, navigation and timing challenges.


Related Links
ESA's Navigation Innovation and Support Programme (NAVISP)
Understanding Time and Space


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TIME AND SPACE
NIST atomic clocks now keep time well enough to improve models of Earth
Washington DC (SPX) Nov 29, 2018


Experimental atomic clocks at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have achieved three new performance records, now ticking precisely enough to not only improve timekeeping and navigation, but also detect faint signals from gravity, the early universe and perhaps even dark matter. The clocks each trap a thousand ytterbium atoms in optical lattices, grids made of laser beams. The atoms tick by vibrating or switching between two energy levels. By comparing two independent cloc ... read more

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