The Free Press Journal

NASA planning to test deep space atomic clock

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NASA is planning to send its new deep space atomic clock on a flight aboard a spacecraft, to test the system's ability to provide accurate onboard timekeepin­g for future missions. In deep space, accurate timekeepin­g is vital to navigation, but not all spacecraft have precise timepieces aboard. For 20 years, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in the US has been perfecting the Deep Space Atomic Clock (DSAC), an instrument being built for deep space exploratio­n. Most missions rely on ground-based antennas paired with atomic clocks for navigation. Ground antennas send narrowly focused signals to spacecraft which return the signal.

NASA uses the difference in time between sending a signal and receiving a response to calculate the spacecraft's location, velocity and path. This method, though reliable, could be made much more efficient. For example, a ground station must wait for the spacecraft to return a signal, so a station can only track one spacecraft at a time.

An Atomic Clock, GPS Receiver and Ultra-Stable Oscillator make up the Deep Space Atomic Clock Payload, and is integrated into the middle bay of Surrey Satellite US Orbital Test Bed Spacecraft. “Navigating in deep space requires measuring vast distances using our knowledge of how radio signals propagate in space,” said Todd Ely of JPL, DSAC’s principal investigat­or.

“Navigating routinely requires distance measuremen­ts accurate to a meter or better. Since radio signals travel at the speed of light, that means we need to measure their time- of-flight to a precision of a few nanosec-

onds,” said Ely. “Atomic clocks have done this routinely on the ground for decades. Doing this in space is what DSAC is all about,” he said. The DSAC project aims to provide accurate onboard timekeepin­g for future NASA missions. Spacecraft using this new technology could use a signal sent from Earth to calculate position without returning the signal and waiting for commands from the ground, a process that can take hours.

Timely location data and onboard control allows for more efficient operations, more precise manoeuvrin­g and adjustment­s to unexpected situations. The innovation will allow ground stations to track multiple satellites at once near areas like Mars, crowded with NASA science missions.

 ?? PIC: NASA.GOV ??
PIC: NASA.GOV

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