NIST基于白兔的时间分布

J. Savory, J. Sherman, S. Romisch
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引用次数: 9

摘要

美国国家标准与技术研究所(NIST)制作了一个实时实现的UTC(NIST),用于促进协调世界时(UTC),并作为美国准确时间的来源。用于时间尺度集成的原子钟、用于UTC的时间传输系统和用于向远程用户传播UTC(NIST)的分发系统位于NIST校园的不同部分,彼此相距很远,也远离UTC(NIST)参考点。由于这些系统的物理输入没有在校园内配置,因此需要一个准确而稳定的时间信号分配基础设施。目前,本地延迟需要以几百皮秒的不确定性来确定,以避免影响时间传递链路校准的最终精度。以前,使用同轴电缆或基于商用光纤的频率传输系统通过激光源的调幅实现在现场位置之间分配信号,并进行时钟跳闸校准以测量这些信号所经历的延迟[1]。基于wr的时间传输系统能够及时、准确地远程复制其输入脉冲每秒(PPS)信号,这使其成为我们之前实施的分配系统的一个非常有吸引力的替代方案,之前的分配系统需要在临时信号中断的情况下进行耗时的重新校准。在本文中,我们评估了在NIST校园内使用基于wr的时间和频率传输,并使用时钟跳闸协议验证其校准程序[1]。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
White Rabbit-Based Time Distribution at NIST
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) produces a real-time realization of UTC(NIST) which is used to contribute to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and as a source for accurate time in the USA. The atomic clocks contributing to the time scale ensemble, the time transfer systems used to contribute to UTC and the distribution system used to disseminate UTC(NIST) to remote users are located in different parts of the NIST campus, far from each other and from the UTC(NIST) reference point. Since the physical inputs to these systems are not collocated within the campus, an accurate and stable infrastructure for time signal distribution is required. Currently, the local delays need to be known with an uncertainty of a few hundreds of picoseconds to avoid compromising the ultimate accuracy of the time transfer link's calibrations. Previously, coaxial cables or a commercial fiber-based frequency transfer system implemented by amplitude-modulation of a laser source were used to distribute signals between on-site locations, and clock trip calibrations were performed to measure the delays experienced by these signals [1]. The capability of WR-based time transfer systems to provide an on-time, accurate remote copy of its input pulse-per-second (PPS) signal made it a very appealing alternative to our previously implemented distribution system, which required time consuming re-calibration following instances of temporary signal interruptions. In this paper, we evaluate the use of WR-based time and frequency transfer within the NIST campus and verify its calibration procedure using a clock trip protocol [1].
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