Submitted by gwplayer1 t3_11boje4 in askscience
parikuma t1_ja3olmd wrote
Reply to comment by Sammy81 in How old is the ISS REALLY? by gwplayer1
Pardon my ignorance, but how come they don't use TAI for precision?
Sammy81 t1_ja6ej2y wrote
I was not familiar with TAI until your question, but I googled it. It looks to me like TAI is the most accurate GPS time. The problem with GPS time is that it is not “earth time”. By that I mean GPS time is independent of the position of the earth. Since the earth rotation is slowing over time, GPS time deviates from it, running ahead of it as the earth slows. UTC time takes this into account. Leap seconds slow GPS time to align with “earth time”, or the time it takes the earth to rotate one time. Since satellites are often concerned with observing earth, or communicating with earth, it’s important for them to stay aligned with the actual earth rotation, so UTC time is more useful. One of my first assignments was making it easy for ground control to upload deltaUT1 and leap seconds to our satellite (Calipso) so that it’s science data was accurately tied to the ECEF reference frame.
Coomb t1_jadvbz3 wrote
As a matter of technical fact, it's not GPS time that gets adjusted with leap seconds, it's UTC. From a user perspective in most cases the difference isn't particularly meaningful because you probably want to convert between GPS time and UTC and for that use case it doesn't matter whether you add or subtract the offset to one parameter or the other. But the satellites don't update the time they broadcast every so often to align with UTC. They've been counting seconds as accurately as they can since they started broadcasting. Instead, they broadcast, in the GPS navigation message, the offset, in integer seconds, from UTC. If you are reading time directly from a GPS message, you never have to worry about it repeating or skipping an increment. UTC technically could do either one of those.
E: to be clear, the GPS control segment routinely updates the clocks on the satellites to maintain synchronization tight enough to meet the GPS specified error budget, but these adjustments are transparent to users and never anywhere close to entire seconds
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