GPS NTP Server – Telling the Time in the Satellite Age




The Global Positioning System was developed by the United State s Military for their armed forces, however following the accidental shooting down of a Korean Airliner in 1983, the US government realised the benefits a civilian system would have in preventing such a disaster.

As a consequence the GPS network was opened up freely for civilian use and is currently the world’s only fully functioning global navigation satellite system (GNSS), although Europe and Russia are to have their own systems within the next decade.

Although the GPS system is primarily used for location finding the only information it relays is the time, which has proved beneficial in keeping computer networks synchronised using a GPS NTP server.

Each GPS satellite contains an atomic clock, these clocks beam to Earth an exact timing signal, precise to a second in several millions of years. The GPS receiver then works out the time each signal took to get to it (a minimum of three is therefore needed) and can work out its exact location by this triangulation.

GPS satellites have to provide exact timing information as light and radio waves can travel 300,000 km each second, a difference which would make navigation hopeless. However, this information can be used by a GPS NTP Server which converts the time signal from the satellites into UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and then synchronises every clock on a network to that time.

Using the GPS network means a GPS NTP server can provide accuracy to a computer network to within a few milliseconds. GPS has therefore not only transformed the way in which the world navigates but also has also revolutionised computer networks with precise timing information making possible many of the Internet  processes such as online purchasing and email that we all take for granted.

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