Appendix E: Automated Computer Time Service (ACTS)

 

 

 

the number changes from 50 to the actual number of

 

 

days until the time change. It will decrement by “1”

 

 

every day, and reach “0” the day the change occurs.

L

=

a one-digit code that indicates whether a leap second

 

 

will be added or subtracted at midnight on the last

 

 

day of the current month. If the code is “0”, no leap

 

 

second will occur this month. If the code is “1”, a

 

 

positive leap second will be added at the end of the

 

 

month. This means that the last minute of the month

 

 

will contain 61 seconds instead of 60. If the code is

 

 

“2”, a second will be deleted on the last day of the

 

 

month. Leap seconds occur at a rate of about one

 

 

per year. They are used to correct for irregularity in

 

 

the earth's rotation.

DUT1

=

a correction factor for converting UTC to an older

 

 

form of universal time. It is always a number

 

 

ranging from -0.8 to +0.8 seconds. This number is

 

 

added to UTC to obtain UT1.

msADV

=

a five-digit code that displays the number of

 

 

milliseconds that NIST advances the time code. It is

 

 

originally set to 45.0 milliseconds. If you return the

 

 

on-time marker (OTM) three consecutive times, it

 

 

will change to reflect the actual one way line delay.

UTC(NIST)

=

a label indicating that you are receiving Coordinated

 

 

Universal Time (UTC) from the National Institute of

 

 

Standards and Technology (NIST).

OTM

=

an on-time marker in the form of an asterisk (*).

 

 

Once the time code is synchronized within a few

 

 

milliseconds of UTC(NIST), the asterisk changes to

 

 

a pound sign (#), as described below.

The time values sent by the time code refer to the arrival time of the OTM. In other words, if the time code says it is 12:45:45, this means it is 12:45:45 when the OTM arrives. Since the OTM is delayed as it travels from NIST to your computer, ACTS sends it out 45 milliseconds early. This always removes some of the delay. Better results are possible if your software returns the OTM to ACTS after it is received. Each time the OTM is returned, ACTS measures the amount of time it took for the OTM to go from ACTS to the user and back to ACTS. This quantity (the round-trip path delay) is divided by 2 to get the one-way path delay. ACTS then advances the OTM by the one-way path delay and the OTM changes from an asterisk to a pound sign (#). When the # sign appears, the time code is synchronized within a few milliseconds of UTC(NIST).

For more information about ACTS, visit the following web site from the National Institute of Standards and Technology: http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/service/acts.htm

E-126

TimeVault User’s Manual

6000-100AppE.fm Rev. D

Page 140
Image 140
Symmetricom Time Server user manual DUT1, Utcnist, Otm