On 4/30/13 4:18 PM, [email protected] wrote:
A bit OT, but back in the day there was what amounted to an X-prize for a real 
accurate chronometer for navigation.

Make that way back in the day.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harrison

And he had a heck of a time collecting. I suspect collecting an X-prize might be easier (assuming you've met the conditions).


The wikipedia article talks about the absolute error in the various clocks (5 seconds for transatlantic passage) but doesn't ever say how long that passage was. I did find another reference that gave 28.5 minutes of longitude over 5 months. If a degree of longitude is 4 minutes of time, then that's an error of about 120 seconds out of 13 million seconds, or 10ppm. That *is* impressive for a mechanical device.

Another story (H5 clock in Kew gardens under supervision of George III) has 4.5 seconds error over 10 weeks, a bit less than 1 ppm.

He had previously built temperature compensated pendulum clocks which achieved 1 second/month, which is about 0.3 ppm.


The OP is shooting for about 30ppb (1 second/year). Of course, he'll spend a bit less time and money than Harrison did...<grin>




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