Mint Hyderabad

Atomic clocks to ensure India sticks to one nation, one time

- Dhirendra Kumar dhirendra.kumar@livemint.com NEW DELHI

India is deploying atomic clocks across the country to ensure the time shown on your digital watch, smartphone or laptop is truly based on Indian Standard Time—an effort launched more than two decades ago after the Kargil war.

Currently, most software operating modules in India rely on US-based Network Time Protocol servers. The government wants all software to instead be synchroniz­ed with indigenous atomic clocks, both for uniformity in time and as a defence mechanism, especially in times of war.

The atomic clocks are being installed by the consumer affairs ministry’s Legal Metrology Department and the National Physical Laboratory, or NPL—the nation’s timekeeper.

India has atomic clocks at Ahmedabad and Faridabad but more are being installed at Bhubaneswa­r, Jaipur and Hyderabad, according to three officials aware of the plan.

“The installati­on and testing of all atomic clocks will be completed by the end of June,” one of them said.

Once the exercise is completed, all computers, smartphone­s, digital watches, and digital radios will have Indian time managed by NPL and the consumer affairs ministry’s Regional Reference Standard Laboratori­es, ensuring “one nation, one time”, this person said.

The project was initiated after the Kargil war when India was denied informatio­n on the GPS location of Pakistani intruders, a second person said. “The importance of having our own time is significan­t, especially in areas like defence security, cybersecur­ity, and online transactio­ns. Even a small time-gap can be crucial in such situations.”

The consumer affairs ministry didn’t immediatel­y reply to queries on the developmen­ts.

Only four other countries— the US, the UK, Japan and Korea—have their own atomic clocks.

The government, through the consumer affairs ministry, is developing a legal framework to mandate that all software service providers across the country synchroniz­e their time with the atomic clocks developed by the NPL, said the first person quoted above.

Failure to comply may result in severe penalties, including the cancellati­on of licences.

“Currently, accurate timekeepin­g is done through satellite… the consumer affairs ministry and NPL are working on a plan to connect all atomic clocks through optical cable as it will be more secure,” said Venu Gopal Achanta, director of CSIR-NPL.

 ?? ?? Atomic clocks will be installed by Legal Metrology Dept and National Physical Laboratory.
Atomic clocks will be installed by Legal Metrology Dept and National Physical Laboratory.

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