City
Epaper

NASA atomic clock to help spacecraft navigate in deep space

By IANS | Updated: August 31, 2019 16:35 IST

NASA has activated an atomic clock that could enable spacecraft to safely navigate themselves in deep space rather than rely on the time-consuming process of receiving directions from Earth.

Open in App

Launched in June, NASA's Deep Space Atomic Clock is now ready for its year-long tech demo, the US space agency said this week.

Developed at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, the clock is the first timekeeper stable enough to map a spacecraft's trajectory in deep space while being small enough to fly onboard the spacecraft.

"The goal of the space experiment is to put the Deep Space Atomic Clock in the context of an operating spacecraft complete with the things that affect the stability and accuracy of a clock and see if it performs at the level we think it will: with orders of magnitude more stability than existing space clocks," said navigator Todd Ely, principal investigator of the project at JPL.

In the coming months, the team will measure how well the clock keeps time down to the nanosecond, NASA said.

A more stable clock can operate farther from Earth, where it needs to work well for longer periods than satellites closer to home.

Atomic clocks, like those used in GPS satellites, are used to measure the distance between objects by timing how long it takes a signal to travel from point A to point B.

For space exploration, atomic clocks must be extremely precise: an error of even one second means the difference between landing on a planet like Mars or missing it by hundreds of thousands of miles.

Up to 50 times more stable than the atomic clocks on GPS satellites, the mercury-ion Deep Space Atomic Clock loses one second every 10 million years, as proven in controlled tests on Earth. Now it will test that accuracy in space, NASA said.

Navigators currently use refrigerator-size atomic clocks on Earth to pinpoint a spacecraft's location.

Minutes to hours can go by as a signal is sent from Earth to the spacecraft before being returned to Earth, where it is used to create instructions that are then sent back to the spacecraft.

A clock aboard a spacecraft would allow the spacecraft to calculate its own trajectory, instead of waiting for navigators on Earth to send that information.

This advancement would free missions to travel farther and, eventually, carry humans safely to other planets.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: EarthNasaDeep Space Atomic ClockJPL
Open in App

Related Stories

LifestyleLunar Eclipse 2025: Chandra Grahan on September 7 or 8? Check Date, Visibility and How to Watch Full Eclipse

InternationalNASA Layoffs: 20% or 3,870 Employees to Exit US Space Agency

Space Surprise: Planet Made of Diamonds Found, Five Times Earth’s Size

InternationalNASA Job Cut: Over 2,000 Senior Officials to Exit Due to Trump-Era Budget Cuts

NationalSolar Eclipse 2025: Know Date, Time, Visibility, and Key Dos & Don’ts

International Realted Stories

InternationalGeneva: Baloch journalist exposes Pakistan's brutality: disappearances, censorship, daily attacks

InternationalProtests sweep PoJK as march towards Muzaffarabad intensifies on fifth day

InternationalRussia-Iran comprehensive partnership treaty comes into force

InternationalPoK crisis: Govt invites protesters for talks; Pakistani establishment blames 'external forces'

InternationalPoK: Nine more killed after clashes continue against Pakistan’s political repression, economic exploitation