francisco
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how is relativity theory applied to gps?
thanks
thanks
The application of relativity theory to GPS technology is critical for maintaining accurate time synchronization between satellites and Earth-based clocks. General Relativity (GR) and Special Relativity (SR) adjustments are made prior to satellite launch to account for time dilation effects, resulting in a net gain of approximately 38 microseconds per day. If these relativistic effects were ignored, GPS signals would accumulate a timing error of about 39 millionths of a second per day, leading to a positional drift of approximately 11.6 kilometers. Regular resynchronization of satellite clocks is necessary due to additional factors such as elliptical orbits and clock drift.
PREREQUISITESPhysicists, aerospace engineers, GPS technology developers, and anyone interested in the practical applications of relativity theory in modern navigation systems.
They are reset every time they pass over a ground station. But the drift rate due to SR and GR is substantially higher than the error in the clocks themselves, so they do make an excellent test-bed for Relativity.TheAntiRelative said:One other note of interest is that while the large GR effects are very pronounced and GPS would nearly immediately be off by a mile (no pun intended) if those considerations were not in the timing, the fact that the satellites are in elliptical orbits, combined with the random drift of the clocks themselves (3 us/day I think it was?)along and other small effects (sagnac and perhaps lense-thirring) requires that they be re-synchronized with Earth clocks on a regular basis.
So while it is a beautiful GR test, I believe the level of error actually exceeds the kinematic effects over time and so it is not the best SR lab from what I hear.
Does anyone know how frequently they are reset? I thought I heard daily.