Archive for the ‘atomic clocks’ Category

Time Server History and The changing ways of recording time

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

The NTP server or network time server as it is often called is the culmination of centuries of horology and chronology. The history of keeping track of time has not been as smooth as you may think.

What month was the Russian October revolution? I’m sure you have guessed that it is a trick question, in fact if you trace the days back to the October revolution that changed the shape of Russia in 1917 you will find it didn’t start until November!

One of the first decisions the Bolsheviks, who had won the revolution, chose to make was to join the rest of eh world by taking up the Gregorian calendar. Russia was last to do adopt the calendar, which is still in use throughout the world today.

This new calendar was more sophisticated that the Julian calendar which most of Europe had been using since the Roman Empire. Unfortunately the Julian calendar did not allow for enough leap years and by the turn of the century this had meant that the seasons had drifted, so-much-so, that when Russia finally adopted the calendar on after Wednesday, 31 January 1918 the following day became Thursday, 14 February 1918.

So whilst the October revolution occurred in October in the old system, to the new Gregorian calendar it meant it had taken place in November.

Whilst the rest of Europe adopted this more accurate calendar earlier than the Russians they still also had to correct the seasonal drift, so in 1752 when Britain changed systems they lost eleven days which according to the populist painter of the time, Hogarth, caused rioters to demand the return of their lost eleven days.

This problem of inaccuracy in keeping track of time was thought to be solved in the 1950’s when the first atomic clocks were developed. These devices were so accurate that they could keep time for a million years without losing a second.

However, it was soon discovered that these new chronometers were in fact too accurate – compared with the Earth’s rotation anyway. The problem was that while atomic clocks could measure the length of a day to the nearest millisecond, a day is never the same length.

The reason being is that the Moon’s gravity affects the Earth’s rotation causing a wobble. This wobble has the effect of slowing down and speeding up the Earth’s spin. If nothing was done to compensate for this then eventually the time told by atomic clocks (International Atomic Time- TAI) and the time based on the Earth’s rotation used by farmers, astronomers and you and I (Greenwich Meantime- GMT) would drift that eventually noon would become midnight (albeit in many millennia).

The solution has been to devise a timescale that is based on atomic time but also accounts for this wobble of the Earth’s rotation. The solution was called UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and accounts for the Earth’s variable rotation by having ‘leap seconds’ occasionally added. There have been over thirty leap seconds added to UTC since its inception in the 1970’s.

UTC is now a global timescale used throughout the world by computer networks to synchronise too. Most computer networks use a NTP server to receive and distribute UTC time.

Next Generation of Atomic Clocks Accurate to a Second in 200 Million Years

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Atomic clocks have been around since the 1950’s. They have provided incredible accuracy in timekeeping with most modern atomic clocks not losing a second in time in a million years.

Thanks to atomic clocks many technologies have become possible and have changed the way we live our lives. Satellite communication, satellite navigation, internet shopping and network communication are only possible thanks to atomic clocks.

Atomic clocks are the basis for the world’s global timescale Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) and are the reference that many computer networks use as a time source to distribute amongst its devices using NTP (Network Time Protocol) and a time server.

Atomic clocks are based on the atom caesium -133. This element has been traditionally used in atomic clocks as its resonance or vibrations during a particular energy state, or extremely high (over 9 billion) and therefore can provide high levels of accuracy.

However, new types of atomic clocks are on the horizon that will boast even more accuracy with the next generation of atomic clocks neither gaining nor losing a second in 200 million years.

The next generation of atomic clocks no longer rely on the caesium atom but use elements such as mercury or strontium and instead of using microwaves such as the caesium clocks these new clocks use light which has higher frequencies.

Strontium’s resonance also exceeds over 430 trillion which is vastly superior to the 9.2 billion vibrations that caesium manages.

Currently atomic clocks can be utilised by computer systems by using either a radio or GPS clock or dedicated NTP time server. These devices can receive the time signal transmitted by atomic clocks and distribute them amongst network devices and computers.

However, the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) have revealed a miniature atomic clock that measures just 1.5 millimetres on a side and about 4 millimetres tall. It  consumes less than 75 thousandths of a watt, and has a stability of about one part in 10 billion, equivalent to a clock that would neither gain nor lose more than a second in 300 years.

In the future these devices could be integrated into computer systems, replacing the current real time clock chips, which are notoriously inaccurate and can drift.

Basic Time Server Information

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

All PC’s and networking devices use clocks to maintain an internal system time. These clocks, called Real Time Clock chips (RTC) provide time and date information. The chips are battery backed so that even during power outages, they can maintain time.

Computer networks rely on timekeeping for nearly all their applications, from sending an email to saving data, a timestamp is necessary for computer to keep track. All routers and switches need to run at the same rate, out of sync devices can lead to data being lost and even entire connections.

For some transactions it is necessary for computers to be perfectly synchronised, even a few seconds difference between machines can have serious effects, such as finding an airline ticket you had booked had been sold moments later to another customer or you could draw your savings out of a cash machine and when your account is empty you could quickly going to another machine and withdraw it all again.

However, personal computers are not designed to be perfect clocks, their design has been optimized for mass production and low-cost rather than maintaining accurate time. However, these internal clocks are prone to drift and although for many application this can be quite adequate, often machines need to work together on a network and if the computers drift at different rates the computers will become out of sync with each other and problems can arise particularly with time sensitive transactions.

Time servers are like other computer servers in the sense they are usually located on a network. A time server gathers timing information, usually from an external hardware source and then synchronises the network to that time.

Most time servers use NTP (Network Time Protocol) which is one of the Internet’s oldest protocols still used, invented by Dr David Mills from the University of Delaware, it has been in utilized since 1985. NTP is a protocol designed to synchronize the clocks on computers and networks across the Internet or Local Area Networks (LANs).

NTP utilises an external timing reference and then synchronises all devices on the network to that time.

There are various sources that a NTP time server can use as a timing reference. The Internet is an obvious source, however, internet timing references from the Internet such as nist.gov and windows.time can not be authenticated, leaving the time server and therefore the network vulnerable to security threats.

Often time servers are synchronised to a UTC (Coordinated Universal time) source which is the global standard time scale and allows computers all over the world to synchronised to exactly the same time. This has obvious importance in industries where exact timing is crucial such as the stock exchange or airline industry.

UTC A global Timescale

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Coordinated Universal Time (UTC – from the  French Temps Universel Coordonné) is an international timescale based on the time told by atomic clocks. Atomic clocks are accurate to within a second in several million years. They are so accurate that International Atomic Time, the time relayed by these devices, is even more accurate than the spin of the Earth.

The Earth’s rotation is affected by the gravity of the moon and can therefore slow or speed up. For this reason, International Atomic Time (TAI from the French Temps Atomique International) has to have ‘Leap seconds’ added to keep it in line with the original timescale GMT (Greenwich meantime) also referred to as UT1, which is based on solar time.

This new timescale known as UTC is now used all over the world allowing computer networks and communications to be conducted at opposite sides of the globe.

UTC is governed not by an individual country or administration but a collaboration of atomic clocks all over the world which ensures political neutrality and also added accuracy.

UTC is transmitted in numerous ways across the globe and is utilised by computer networks, airlines and satellites to ensure accurate synchronisation no matter what the location on the Earth.

In the USA NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) broadcast UTC from their atomic clock in Fort Collins, Colorado. The National Physics Laboratories of the UK and Germany have similar systems in Europe.

The internet is also another source of UTC time. Over a thousand time servers across the web can be used to receive a UTC time source, although many are not precise enough for most networking needs.

Another, secure and more accurate method of receiving UTC is to use the signals transmitted by the USA’s Global Positioning System. The satellites of the GPS network all contain atomic clocks that are used to enable positioning. These clocks transmit the time which can be received using a GPS receiver.

Many dedicated time servers are available that can receive a UTC time source from either the GPS network or the National physics Laboratory’s transmissions (all of which are broadcast at 60 kHz longwave).

Most time servers use NTP (Network Time Protocol) to distribute and synchronise computer networks to UTC time.

Receiving the Time with Time Servers and the MSF transmitter

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

MSF is the name given to the dedicated time broadcast provided by the National Physical Laboratory in the UK, It is an accurate and reliable source of UK civil time, based on the time scale UTC (Coordinated Universal Time).

MSF is used throughout the UK and indeed other parts of Europe to receive a UTC time source which can be used by radio clocks and to synchronise computer networks by using a NTP time server.

It is available 24 hours a day across the whole of the UK although in some areas the signal can be weaker and it is susceptible to interference and local topography. The signal operates on a frequency of 60 kHz and carries a time and date code which relays the following information in binary format: Year, month, day of month,  day of week,  hour,  minute,  British Summer Time (in effect or imminent) and DUT1 (the difference between UTC and UT1 which is based on the Earths rotation)

The MSF signal is transmitted from Anthorn Radio Station in Cumbria but was only recently moved there after residing in Rugby, Warwickshire since it was started in the 1960’s. The signal’s carrier frequency is at 60 kHz, controlled by caesium atomic clocks at the radio station.

Caesium atomic clocks are the most reliably accurate atomic clocks anywhere, neither losing nor gaining a second in several millions of years.

To receive the MSF signal simple radio clocks can be used to display the exact UTC time or alternatively MSF referenced time servers can receive the long-wave transmission and distribute the timing information around computer networks using NTP (Network Time Protocol).

The only real alternative to the MSF signal in the UK is to use the onboard caesium clocks of the GPS network (Global Positioning System) that relay accurate time information that can be used as a UTC time source.

Six Reasons why you need a Dedicated Network Time Server!

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Security
Having inaccurate time or running a network that is not synchronised can leave a computer system vulnerable to security threats and even fraud. Timestamps are the only point of reference for a computer to track applications and events. If these are inaccurate all sorts of problems can occur such as emails arriving before they were sent. It also makes possible such time sensitive transactions as e-commerce, online reservation and trading in stocks and share where exact timing with a network time server is essential and prices can fall or rise by millions in a second.

Protection:
Failure to synchronise a computer network can allow hackers and malicious uses the opportunity to get at your system, even fraudsters can take advantage. Even those machines that are synchronised can fall victim, especially when the use the Internet as a timing reference which allows an open door for malicious users to inject a virus into your network. Using Radio or GPS atomic clocks provide accurate time behind your firewall maintaining you security.

Accuracy:
NTP Time Servers ensure that all networked computers are synchronized automatically to the accurate time and date, now and in the future, automatically updating the network during daylight saving and leap seconds.

Legality:
If computer data is ever to be used in a court of law then it essential that the information comes from a network that is synchronised. If the system is not then the evidence may be inadmissible.

Happy users:
Stop users complaining about incorrect time on their workstations

Control:
You have control of the configuration. For example you can automatically changes the time forward and back each Spring and Autumn for daylight saving time or set your server time to be locked to UTC time only or any time zone you choose.

The Atomic Clock and the NTP Time Server

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Most people have heard of atomic clocks, their accuracy and precision are well known. An ato0mic clock has the potential to keep time for several hundred million years and not lose a second in drift. Drift is the process where clocks lose or gain time because of the inaccuracies in the mechanisms that make them work.

Mechanical clocks, for instance, have been around for hundreds of years but even the most expensive and well engineered will drift at least a second a day. Whilst electronic clocks are more accurate they also will drift by about a second a week.

Atomic clocks have no comparison when it comes to time keeping. Because an atomic clock is based on the oscillation of an atom (in most cases the caesium 133 atom) which has an exact and finite resonance (caesium is 9,192,631,770 every second) this makes them accurate to within a billionth of a second (a nanosecond).

While this type of accuracy is unparalleled it has made possible technologies and innovations that have changed the world. Satellite communication is only possible thanks to the time keeping of atomic clocks, so is satellite navigation. As the speed of light (and therefore radio waves) travel at over 300,000km a second an inaccuracy of a second could see a navigation system be hundreds of thousands of miles out.

Precise accuracy is also essential in many modern computer applications. Global communication, particularly financial transactions have to be done precisely. In Wall Street or the London stock exchange a second can see the value of stock rise or fall by millions. Online reservation also requires the accuracy and perfect synchronisation only atomic clocks can provide otherwise tickets could be sold more than once and cash machines could end up paying out your wages twice if you found a cash machine with a slow clock.

Whilst this may sound desirable to the more dishonest of us, it doesn’t take much imagination to understand what problems a lack of accuracy and synchronisation could cause. For this reason an International timescale based on the time told by atomic clocks has been developed.

UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the same everywhere and can account for the slowing of the Earth’s rotation by adding leap seconds to keep UTC inline with GMT (Greenwich Meantime). All computer networks that participate in global communication need to be synchronised to UTC. Because UTC is based on the time told by atomic clocks it is the most precise timescale possible. For a computer network to receive and keep synchronised to UTC  it first needs access to an atomic clock. These are expensive and large pieces of equipment and are generally only to be found in large scale physics laboratories.

Fortunately the time told by these clocks can still be received by a network time server wither by utilising time and frequency long wave broadcasts transmitted by national physics laboratories or from the GPS (Global Positioning system). NTP (network time protocol) can then distribute this UTC time to the network and use the time signal to keep all devices on the network perfectly synchronised to UTC.

Accuracy in Timekeeping Atomic clocks and Time Servers

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

The development of atomic clocks throughout the twentieth century has been fundamental to many of the technologies we employ everyday. Without atomic clocks many of the innovations of the twentieth century would simply not exist.

Satellite communication, global positioning, computer networks and even the Internet would not be able to function in the way we are used to if it wasn’t for atomic clocks and their ultra-precision in timekeeping.

Atomic clocks are incredibly accurate chronometers not losing a second in millions of years. In comparison digital clocks may lose a second every week and the most intricately accurate mechanical clocks lose even more time.

The reason for an atomic clock’s incredible precision is that it is based on an oscillation of a single atom. An oscillation is merely a vibration at a particular energy level in the case of most atomic clocks they are based on the resonance of the caesium atom which oscillates at exactly 9,192,631,770 times every second.

Many technologies now rely on atomic clocks for their unbridled accuracy. The global positing system is a prime example. GPS satellites all have onboard an atomic clock and it is this timing information that is used to work out positioning. Because GPS satellites communicate using radio waves and they travel at the speed of light (180,000 miles a second in a vacuum), tiny inaccuracies in the time could make positioning inaccurate by hundreds of miles.

Another application that requires the use of atomic clocks is in computer networks. When computers talk to each other across the globe it is imperative that they all use the same timing source. If they didn’t, time sensitive transactions such as Internet shopping, online reservations, the stock exchange and even sending an email would be near to impossible. Emails would arrive before they were sent and the same item on an Internet shopping site could be sold to more than one person.

For this reason a global timescale called UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) based on the time told by atomic clocks has been developed. UTC is delivered to computer networks via times servers. Most time servers utilise NTP (network time protocol) to distribute and synchronize the networks.

NTP time servers can receive UTC time from a number of sources most commonly the onboard atomic clocks of the GPS system can be used as a UTC source by a time server connected to a GPS antenna.

Another method that is quite commonly used by NTP time servers is to utilise the long wave radio transmission broadcast by several countries’ national physics laboratories.  Whilst not available everywhere and quite susceptible to local topography the broadcasts do provide a secure method of receiving timing source.

If neither of these methods is available then a UTC timing source can be received from the Internet although accuracy and security are not guaranteed.