[time-nuts] Sidereal time

mike cook michael.cook at wanadoo.fr
Fri Jan 15 07:41:04 UTC 2010


No such thing as a siderial second.

Le 15/01/2010 05:04, Neville Michie a écrit :
>
> It is an interesting question, we are so used to WWV and GPS with 
> regular time signals to synchronise clocks to mean solar time.
> One method is to get a pocket calculator to identify a time in the 
> future when a siderial second nearly corresponds to a UTC second
> and use the PPS pulse from GPS to jam a preset time into the Siderial 
> clock, (or start a halted clock with the correct time preset.
> How long you have to wait for corresponding seconds depends on how 
> accurate you want it.
> cheers, Neville Michie
>
>
>
> On 15/01/2010, at 2:25 PM, Bruce Griffiths wrote:
>
>> Brian Kirby wrote:
>>> I would like to have an electronic clock to keep sidereal time.  I 
>>> am planning on using a HP 59309A, which can except an external clock 
>>> of 1/5/10 Mhz.
>>>
>>> According to Wikipedia sidereal time is 23 hours 56 minutes and 
>>> 4.091 seconds - a total of 86,164.091 seconds
>>>
>>> So 86,400 seconds for a normal "atomic defined" day divided by 
>>> 86,164.091 = 1.002,737,903,89
>>>
>>> If I set the 59309A to 10 Mhz external clock and dial a synthesizer 
>>> up to 10.0273790, the unit should be able to keep sidereal time.
>>>
>>> Is my math and theory correct ?
>>>
>>> Brian - KD4FM
>>>
>> That just gives the rate.
>> How are you going to set the actual Sidereal time to better than the 
>> 0.9s that can be deduced from UTC?
>>
>> Bruce
>>
>>
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