Why It's So Difficult To Establish a Lunar Time Standard

Written by exoplanetology | Published 2025/02/25
Tech Story Tags: space-exploration | space-navigation-clocks | earth-moon-time-difference | cislunar-navigation-system | lagrange-point-clock-rates | einstein-relativity-in-space | relativistic-time-dilation | time-transfer-in-space

TLDR GPS clocks are pre-adjusted for relativity to match Earth's surface time. Applying similar principles to the Earth-Moon system presents challenges due to Keplerian orbit differences, tidal effects, and relativistic time variations. Understanding these factors is key to lunar navigation.via the TL;DR App

Table of Links

Abstract and 1. Introduction

  1. Clock in Orbit

    2.1 Coordinate Time

    2.2 Local Frame for the Moon

  2. Clock Rate Differences Between Earth and Moon

  3. Clocks at Earth-Moon Lagrance Points

    4.1 Clock at Lagrange point L1

    4.2. Clock at Lagrange point L2

    4.3. Clock at Lagrange point L4 or L5

  4. Conclusions

Appendix 1: Fermi Coordinates with Origin at the Center of the Moon

Appendix 2: Construction of Freely Falling Center of Mass Frame

Appendix 3: Equations of Motion of Earth and Moon

Appendix 4: Comparing Results in Rotating and Non-Rotating Coordinate Systems

Acknowledgments and References

2. CLOCKS IN ORBIT

An instructive example of establishing a coordinate time on Earth is the GPS time. The constellation clocks are set to beat at the average coordinate rate corresponding to clocks at rest on the surface of the rotating Earth by applying a “factory frequency offset” to the clocks before launch, which is [4]

This model is based on using an eccentric Keplerian orbit in the local inertial frame centered on Earth’s center of mass. The center of mass of the Earth and Moon approximately follows a Keplerian orbit. However, for the EarthMoon system, one cannot have a Keplerian orbit in a coordinate system centered on the Earth and a Keplerian orbit in a coordinate system centered on the Earth-Moon center of mass with the same orbit parameters. There are also relativistic effects arising from changes in time and length scales, Lorentz contraction, and changes in tidal effects.

Authors:

(1) Neil Ashby, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80305 ([email protected]);

(2) Bijunath R. Patla, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Boulder, CO 80305 ([email protected]).


This paper is available on arxiv under CC0 1.0 license.


Written by exoplanetology | What's out there? Aliens, water, or just a big empty nothingness? Monumental research about the vastness of our cosmos.
Published by HackerNoon on 2025/02/25