Hello Time-nuts mailing list,

Let me introduce myself, my name is Tani Aguayo, I am a physicist working on precision clocks for Stanford Research Systems (SRS). We had the pleasure of having Tom Van Baak visit our lab yesterday, and I want to write down some of the topics we talked about, and I thought this list would be a good place to keep it, and share it. And also have Tom go over it, and correct me if I got something wrong.

We talked GPS, and here is a couple of thought inducing comments from Tom:

Q: Why is there an timing offset of 20ns average between identical commercial off-the-shelf GPS modules? TVB: A low-cost (~$25-$50) GPS receiver gathers timing information via a data lock to the local oscillator in the receiver, meaning the the timing information is based on data passed to the receiver and then the receiver uses that to produce a signal based on its own oscillator. This is one part of what can explain the differences between units, the stability of the receiver local clock will mask the precision timing of the GPS 1 pps. The other part is that this timing data is based on the GPS antenna parameters, and so any disturbing effects (i.e. cable tempcos, impedance mismatches, active filtering in the antenna that could introduce group delays... ) on the transmission path from antenna to receiver, will affect the timing precision of the GPS 1pps at the receiver with respect to UTC. This effect could change from unit to unit, as different antennas would have different effects on the signal.

Q: When it comes to using a GPSDO to measure timing performance (Sigma -Tau) any hiccups on GPS could make this calculation fail and you would not know until after the fact, is there a way around this dependence? TVB: It is hard to get a beautiful 10MHz and see how in a matter of days, the timing quality is lost due to aging, tempcos, GPS hiccups... you name it. A better approach is to keep a log of your clock against GPS (without locking to it) and use an offline approach to compute your timing performance (Sigma-Tau) and this way you can look at your clock performance without mixing the GPS locking loop parameters.

Thank Tom for sharing this insight with us!

- Tani Aguayo






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