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Reverting edits: Nit-picking, but, the on-time mark is the moment that the timestamp applies to: the falling edge of the marker bit. It's not the entire bit.
Wording tweak; rm redundancy
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WWVB also, as a method of station identification, advances the phase of its carrier wave by 45° at ten minutes past the hour, and returns to normal (a −45° shift) five minutes later. This phase step is equivalent to "cutting and pasting" 1/8 of a 60 kHz carrier cycle, or approximately 2.08 [[microsecond|µs]].
WWVB also, as a method of station identification, advances the phase of its carrier wave by 45° at ten minutes past the hour, and returns to normal (a −45° shift) five minutes later. This phase step is equivalent to "cutting and pasting" 1/8 of a 60 kHz carrier cycle, or approximately 2.08 [[microsecond|µs]].
<br style="clear:both" />[[Image:WWVB_time_code_format.svg|750px|center]]
<br style="clear:both" />[[Image:WWVB_time_code_format.svg|750px|center]]
<br/>

{|class=wikitable style="text-align:center"
{|class=wikitable style="text-align:center;float:left;"
|+ WWVB Time code
! Bit || Weight || Meaning
! Bit || Weight || Meaning
|rowspan=31|
|rowspan=31|
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| :51 || 4
| :51 || 4
|-
|-
| :22 || 200 ||rowspan=8| Day of year<br/>1=January 1<br/>365=December 31<br/>366=December 31, leap year
| :22 || 200 ||rowspan=7| Day of year<br/>1=January 1<br/>365=December 31<br/>366=December 31, leap year
| :52 || 2
| :52 || 2
|-
|-
Line 104: Line 103:
|-
|-
| :25 || 80
| :25 || 80
| :55 || LYI || Leap year indicator.
| :55 || LYI || Leap year indicator
|-
|-
| :26 || 40
| :26 || 40
| :56 || LSW || Leap second at end of current month.
| :56 || LSW || Leap second at end of current month
|-
|-
| :27 || 20
| :27 || 20
| :57 || DST1 || DST in effect as of 24:00Z today.
| :57 || 2 || rowspan=2 | ''DST status value:''<br/>2 = DST begins today.<br/>3 = DST in effect.<br/>1 = DST ends today.<br/>0 = DST not in effect.
|-
|-
| :28 || 10
| :28 || 10
| :58 || 1
| :58 || DST2 || DST in effect as 00:00Z today.
|- bgcolor=lightpink
|- bgcolor=lightpink
| :29 || P3
| :29 || P3 || Marker bit
| :59 || P0 || Marker bit.
| :59 || P0 || Marker bit
|}
|}


The on-time mark, the moment that the time stamp applies to, is the leading (falling) edge of the frame reference marker bit, thus the time stamp is always transmitted later than the time it encodes. Unlike other national time services, the time transmitted is UTC; the clock must apply the appropriate time zone offset.
The on-time marker, the exact moment to which the time stamp applies, is the leading (negative-going) edge of the frame reference marker bit, thus the time stamp is always transmitted in the minute immediately after the moment it represents.
Unlike other national time services, the time transmitted is UTC; the clock must apply the appropriate time zone offset.


When a leap second is scheduled for the end of a month, the leap second warning bit is set near the beginning of the month, and reset immediately after the leap second insertion. The DST warning bits change at 00:00 UTC. The DST1 bit changes at the beginning of the UTC day that DST comes into effect, providing a minimum of 5 hours' warning (of the [[Eastern Time Zone|EDT→EST change]]), and the DST2 bit changes at the end of the UTC day. It is up to the receiving clock to apply the change at 02:00 local time if it notices the bits differ.
When a leap second is scheduled for the end of a month, the leap second warning bit is set near the beginning of the month, and reset immediately after the leap second insertion.


The DST status bits change at 00:00 UTC. The DST1 bit changes at the beginning of the UTC day that DST comes into effect, providing a minimum of 5 hours' notification (of the [[Eastern Time Zone|EDT→EST change]]), and the DST2 bit changes at the end of the UTC day. It is up to the receiving clock to apply the change at 02:00 local time if it notices the bits differ.
{{clear}}
== Propagation ==
== Propagation ==
Since WWVB's [[low frequency]] signal tends to propagate better [[groundwave|along the ground]], it requires a shorter and less turbulent path to get to the radio receivers than WWV's [[shortwave]] signal, which is strongest when it [[skywave|bounces]] between the [[ionosphere]] and the ground. This results in the WWVB signal having greater accuracy than the WWV signal as received at the same site. Also, since longwave signals tend to propagate much farther at night, the WWVB signal can reach a larger coverage area during that time period, which is why many radio-controlled clocks are usually programmed to automatically synchronize themselves with the WWVB time code during local nighttime hours.
Since WWVB's [[low frequency]] signal tends to propagate better [[groundwave|along the ground]], it requires a shorter and less turbulent path to get to the radio receivers than WWV's [[shortwave]] signal, which is strongest when it [[skywave|bounces]] between the [[ionosphere]] and the ground. This results in the WWVB signal having greater accuracy than the WWV signal as received at the same site. Also, since longwave signals tend to propagate much farther at night, the WWVB signal can reach a larger coverage area during that time period, which is why many radio-controlled clocks are usually programmed to automatically synchronize themselves with the WWVB time code during local nighttime hours.

Revision as of 02:48, 31 March 2009

For the Virginia based broadcast radio station, please see WWVB-FM.
WWVB antenna and support towers.

WWVB is a NIST time signal radio station near Fort Collins, Colorado, co-located with WWV. WWVB is the station that radio-controlled clocks throughout North America use to synchronize themselves. The signal transmitted from WWVB is a continuous 60 kHz carrier wave, derived from a set of atomic clocks located at the transmitter site. A 1 bit-per-second time code, which is derived from the same set of atomic clocks, is then modulated onto the carrier wave using a technique described as pulse width modulation followed by amplitude-shift keying. The time in this code is given in UTC, which the radio-controlled clocks then have to convert to their own local time. A single complete frame of time code lasts one minute.

Antennas

WWVB antenna coordinates (WGS84)
North 40°40′50.6″N 105°03′01.7″W / 40.680722°N 105.050472°W / 40.680722; -105.050472
South 40°40′28.9″N 105°02′42.3″W / 40.674694°N 105.045083°W / 40.674694; -105.045083

There are two identical antennas used to radiate the WWVB signal. Both antennas are 122 meters tall, and their centers are separated by 857 meters. The physical configuration of each antenna is a diamond-shaped "top loaded monopole", consisting of several cables spread on a flat plane from the top of their support towers, and a vertical cable that connects the top plane to a "helix house" on the ground. Each helix house contains a dual fixed-variable inductor system, which is used to keep the antenna system at its maximum radiating efficiency. The amount of cable used in each antenna is supposed to approach an optimum length of one-quarter wavelength, which for 60 kHz is almost 1.25 km.

Modulation Format

At the start of each UTC second, the WWVB 60 kHz carrier, which has a normal power of 70 kW, is reduced in power by 17 dB to 1.4 kW. Before July 12, 2005, when WWVB's maximum ERP was 50 kW, the power reduction was 10 dB, resulting in a 5 kW signal. The type of bit transmitted on each second is determined by when the carrier wave is returned to normal power within that second. If the carrier power is returned to normal in one-fifth of a second, or 0.2 s, from when it was reduced, the bit is a zero. If the carrier power is returned to normal in one half-second, or 0.5 s, the bit is a one. If the carrier power is returned to normal in four-fifths of a second, or 0.8 s, the bit is a marker bit. Marker bits are sent during seconds 0, 9, 19, 29, 39, 49 and 59 of each minute; the other 53 seconds are binary time code data. (Unused bits are transmitted as binary 0.) Thus, the start of the second of two consecutive marker bits indicates the top of the minute, as well as serves as the on-time marker for the next frame of time code. A marker bit is also sent during leap seconds, so in this exceptional event, three consecutive marker bits will be transmitted.

WWVB also, as a method of station identification, advances the phase of its carrier wave by 45° at ten minutes past the hour, and returns to normal (a −45° shift) five minutes later. This phase step is equivalent to "cutting and pasting" 1/8 of a 60 kHz carrier cycle, or approximately 2.08 µs.



Bit Weight Meaning Bit Weight Meaning
:00 FRM Frame reference marker bit :30 8 Day of year (continued)
:01 40 Minutes :31 4
:02 20 :32 2
:03 10 :33 1
:04 0 :34 0 Unused, always 0.
:05 8 :35 0
:06 4 :36 + DUT1 sign.
If +, both bits 36 and 38 are set.
If −, bit 37 is set.
:07 2 :37
:08 1 :38 +
:09 P1 Marker bit :39 P4 Marker bit
:10 0 Unused, always 0. :40 0.8 DUT1 value (0–0.9 s).
DUT1 = UT1−UTC.
:11 0 :41 0.4
:12 20 Hours :42 0.2
:13 10 :43 0.1
:14 0 :44 0 Unused, always 0.
:15 8 :45 80 Year
:16 4 :46 40
:17 2 :47 20
:18 1 :48 10
:19 P2 Marker bit :49 P5
:20 0 Unused, always 0. :50 8
:21 0 :51 4
:22 200 Day of year
1=January 1
365=December 31
366=December 31, leap year
:52 2
:23 100 :53 1
:24 0 :54 0 Unused, always 0.
:25 80 :55 LYI Leap year indicator
:26 40 :56 LSW Leap second at end of current month
:27 20 :57 2 DST status value:
2 = DST begins today.
3 = DST in effect.
1 = DST ends today.
0 = DST not in effect.
:28 10 :58 1
:29 P3 Marker bit :59 P0 Marker bit

The on-time marker, the exact moment to which the time stamp applies, is the leading (negative-going) edge of the frame reference marker bit, thus the time stamp is always transmitted in the minute immediately after the moment it represents.

Unlike other national time services, the time transmitted is UTC; the clock must apply the appropriate time zone offset.

When a leap second is scheduled for the end of a month, the leap second warning bit is set near the beginning of the month, and reset immediately after the leap second insertion.

The DST status bits change at 00:00 UTC. The DST1 bit changes at the beginning of the UTC day that DST comes into effect, providing a minimum of 5 hours' notification (of the EDT→EST change), and the DST2 bit changes at the end of the UTC day. It is up to the receiving clock to apply the change at 02:00 local time if it notices the bits differ.

Propagation

Since WWVB's low frequency signal tends to propagate better along the ground, it requires a shorter and less turbulent path to get to the radio receivers than WWV's shortwave signal, which is strongest when it bounces between the ionosphere and the ground. This results in the WWVB signal having greater accuracy than the WWV signal as received at the same site. Also, since longwave signals tend to propagate much farther at night, the WWVB signal can reach a larger coverage area during that time period, which is why many radio-controlled clocks are usually programmed to automatically synchronize themselves with the WWVB time code during local nighttime hours.

The radiation pattern of WWVB antennas is designed to present a field strength of at least 100 μV/m over most of the continental United States and Southern Canada during some portion of the day. Although this value is well above the thermal noise floor, man-made noise and local interference from a wide range of electronic equipment can easily swamp out the signal. Positioning receiving antennas away from electronic equipment helps to reduce the effects of local interference.

Antenna re-use with former WWVL

Another time signal station, WWVL, began transmitting a 500 watt signal on 20 kHz in August 1963. It used Frequency Shift Keying (FSK), shifting from 20 kHz to 26 kHz, to send data. The WWVL broadcast was discontinued in July 1972.

As part of a WWVB modernization program in the late 1990s, the decommissioned WWVL antenna was refurbished and used to radiate the WWVB signal. Using both antennas simultaneously allowed for a WWVB transmitter power increase to 50 kW (later 70 kW), as well as providing a backup antenna that now facilitates routine maintenance. WWVB radiates 27 kW of power when operating on only one antenna.

WWVB east plans

WWVB's Colorado location makes the signal weakest on the U.S. east coast, where urban density also produces considerable interference. NIST is considering adding a second time code transmitter, on the east coast, to improve signal reception there. Such a transmitter would use the same time code, but a different frequency.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ "NIST Eyes East Coast Version of WWVB", Radio World, 2008-01-18, retrieved 2009-03-30, The National Institute of Standards and Technology is considering setting up a U.S. East Coast low-frequency radio station broadcasting NIST time in binary code format to complement the present NIST 60 kHz, WWVB broadcast. "The proposed new East Coast broadcast will operate with the same time code format as the present WWVB signal, however at a different carrier frequency, potentially at 40 kHz," John Lowe, the WWVB station manager, told RW.

External links