Standard frequency and time signal service: Difference between revisions

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Time signals in use: Reordered text below table to clarify table covers not just U.S.; rearranged table to separate non-standard signals.
 
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{{Short description|Radiocommunication service for scientific and other purposes}}
[[File:Dcf77.jpg|thumb|250px|<center> Standard frequency and time signal radio station [[DCF77]]]]
See also: {{main|Radio station|Radiocommunication service}}
[[File:YVTO time.ogg|thumb|<center> Radiocommunication signal of the time signal transmitter station [[YVTO]]]]
[[File:Dcf77.jpg|thumb|250px300px|<{{center> |Standard frequency and time signal radio station [[DCF77]]}}]]
[[File:YVTO time.ogg|thumb|<{{center> |Radiocommunication signal of the time signal transmitter station [[YVTO]]}}]]
 
'''Standard frequency and time signal service''' (short: '''SFTS''') is, according to ''Article 1.53'' of the [[International Telecommunication Union|International Telecommunication Union´'s]] (ITU) [[ITU Radio Regulations|Radio Regulations]] (RR),<ref name="ReferenceA">ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.53, definition: ''standard frequency and time signal service''</ref> – defined as ''«"A radiocommunication service for scientific, technical and other purposes, providing the transmission of specified frequencies, time signals, or both, of stated high precision, intended for general reception''".»
 
See also: {{main|Radio station|Radiocommunication service}}
 
==Classification==
In accordance with ''ITU Radio Regulations'' (article 1) variations of this ''radiocommunication service'' are classified as follows:<br />
'''Standard frequency and time signal service''' (article 1.53)<br />
* [[Standard frequency and time signal-satellite service]]
 
In general this ''radiocommunication service '' uses radio stations as follows:
*[[Standard frequency and time signal station]]sstations (article 1.95)
 
==Standard frequency and time signal-satellite service==
[[File:Dezhurov GTS-21.jpg|thumb|250px|{{center|GTS-Module onboard ISS, handled by [[astronaut]] [[Vladimir Dezhurov]]}}]]
''' Standard frequency and time signal-satellite service ''' (short: '''SFTSS''') is, according to ''Article 1.54'' of the [[International Telecommunication Union|International Telecommunication Union's]] (ITU) [[ITU Radio Regulations|Radio Regulations]] (RR),<ref>ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.54, definition: ''standard frequency and time signal-satellite service''</ref> defined as ''A radiocommunication service using [[space radio station|space stations]] on earth [[satellite]]s for the same purposes as those of the standard frequency and time signal service''.
 
An example to this were experiments of time synchronisation (Global Transmission Services GTS-2) onboard International Space Station. However, in accordance to the ubiquitous availability, GNSS-satellite signals will be used in practice (see also: [[GPS disciplined oscillator]]).
 
==Frequency allocation==
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| [[International Telecommunication Union region|Region 1]] || Region 2 || Region 3
|-
|colspan="3"|19.95-2095–20.05 [[kHz|MHz]] &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; '''STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (20 kHz&nbsp;MHz)'''
|-
|colspan="3"|2 498-2 501 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (2 500 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|4 995-5995–5 003 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (5 000 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|5 003-5003–5 005 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL<br />
:::::: Space research
|-
|colspan="3"|9 995-10995–10 003 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (10 000 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|10 003-10003–10 005 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL<br />
:::::: Space research
|-
|colspan="3"|14 990-15990–15 005 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (15 000 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|15 005-15005–15 010 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL<br />
:::::: Space research
|-
|colspan="3"|19 990-19990–19 995 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL<br />
:::::: Space research
|-
|colspan="3"|19 995-20995–20 010 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (20 000 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|24 990-25990–25 005 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL (25 000 kHz&nbsp;MHz)
|-
|colspan="3"|25 005-25005–25 010 kHz&nbsp;MHz &nbsp;&nbsp; STANDARD FREQUENCY AND TIME SIGNAL<br />
:::::: Space research
|-
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|[[BPM (time service)|BPM]]
|Pucheng, China
|2.5, 5, 10, & 15 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
|ITU-R TF.768-5<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.itu.int/dms_pubrec/itu-r/rec/tf/R-REC-TF.768-5-200202-S!!PDF-E.pdf|title=RECOMMENDATION ITU-R TF.768-5 Standard frequencies and time signals|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171222053729/https://www.itu.int/dms_pubrec/itu-r/rec/tf/R-REC-TF.768-5-200202-S!!PDF-E.pdf|archive-date=2017-12-22|dead-url=|access-datestatus=dead}}</ref>
|-
|BSF
|Chung-Li, Taiwan, Rep. of China
|5 and 15 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
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|EBC
|[[Cádiz]]
|4.998 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 95 ⟶ 101:
|[[HLA (radio station)|HLA]]
|Taejon, Republic of Korea
|5 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 102 ⟶ 108:
|IAM
|Rome, Italy
|5 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 109 ⟶ 115:
|LOL
|Buenos Aires, Argentina
|5, 10, & 15 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 116 ⟶ 122:
|MIKES
|[[Espoo, Finland]]
|25 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 123 ⟶ 129:
|[[OMA (time signal)|OMA]]
|Prague, Czech Republic
|2.5 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 130 ⟶ 136:
|PPE
|[[Rio de Janeiro]], Brazil
|10 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 137 ⟶ 143:
|[[RWM]]
|Moscow, Russia
|4.99z996, 9.996, 14.996 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 144 ⟶ 150:
|[[WWV (radio station)|WWV]]
|Fort Collins, Colorado, United States
|2.5, 5, 10, 15, & 20 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 151 ⟶ 157:
|[[WWVH]]
|Kekaha, Kauai, Hawaii, United States
|2.5, 5, 10, & 15 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 158 ⟶ 164:
|[[YVTO]]
|Caracas, [[Venezuela]]
|5 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
Line 167 ⟶ 173:
|[[CHU (radio station)|CHU]]
|[[Ottawa, Ontario]], Canada
|3.33, 7.85, 14.67 &nbsp;MHz
|
|
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=== United States ===
The '''Standard Time and Frequency Signal''' (STFS) is a [[Radiocommunication service]] providing the transmission of specified [[frequency]] and [[time]] signal, of [[Standardization|stated]] high precision, intended for general reception in the United States and beyond. The radio signals are broadcast on very precise [[Carrier signal|carrier]] frequencies by the [[United States Naval Observatory|U.S. Naval Observatory]] and the [[National Institute of Standards and Technology]] (NIST), formerly the National Bureau of Standards (NBS). The technical specification of that particular service is in line to the provisions of the [[International Telecommunication Union|International Telecommunication Union´'s]] (ITU) [[ITU Radio Regulations|Radio Regulations]] (RR)<ref>ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.53, definition: ''standard frequency and time signal service''<name="ReferenceA"/ref>
 
== External links ==
== See also ==
* [http://tf.nist.gov/ NIST Time and Frequency Division]
* [[Time synchronization in North America]]
* [http://www.nplindia.org/time-and-frequency-standards NPL India Time and Frequency Standards]
* [[Radio Clock]]
* [http://www.itu.int International Telecommunication Union (ITU)]
* [[Time_signal#Radio_time_sources]]
 
==References ==
{{reflist}}
 
== External links ==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060421225303/http://tf.nist.gov/ NIST Time and Frequency Division]
* [http://www.nplindia.org/time-and-frequency-standards NPL India Time and Frequency Standards]'''Bad Link'''
 
{{Radiocommunication services ITU}}
 
[[Category:Radiocommunication services ITU]]
[[Category:Standards]]