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On Mon, 15 Oct 2007 09:06:49 -0700, Jim Lux
wrote: hear the tocks fairly clearly and even understand the voice. (Who knew the announcer's phrase for UTC "Coordinated Universal Time"?). UTC is not an acronym. It's a madeup identifier that matches neither the English (Coordinated Universal Time) or the French (T U C.. I won't even attempt to figure out what it is..). Hi All, In fact, UTC is an acronym (already anticipated by Frnak and explicitly stated every minute). It is but one of several, this one being rather genericized (because any longer would force a lot of talking, and minute passes by pretty quickly). The others would include: UTC(NIST), UT1; and the academic UT0, and UT2. The reason for the initials order is that there is an hidden comma. Universal Time, Coordinated. Wikipedia reports this as an erroneous expansion, but Wikipedia wasn't there in my Metrology classes (a couple dozen miles from NBS) where we worked with these NBS standards. It wasn't there when (1974) I performed the second leap second on my Cesium Beam Standard which was calibrated through WWVB (taking about half an hour, part of which was waiting during the roughly 15 minute intervals between TOCs). My antenna was so far away (on the fantail of the ship in another "time zone"), that I had to slip the time by 100nS. Knowing that Arthur only reads his own threads, I won't have to anticipate his rejection of the following efficiency reports for a non-gaussian antenna. From NIST (the people who know efficiency) about their 60KHz antenna system: "Each antenna is a top loaded monopole consisting of four 122-m towers arranged in a diamond shape. A system of cables, often called a capacitance hat or top hat, is suspended between the four towers. This top hat is electrically isolated from the towers, and is electrically connected to a downlead suspended from the center of the top hat. The downlead serves as the radiating element. "Ideally, an efficient antenna system requires a radiating element that is at least one-quarter wavelength long. At 60 kHz, this becomes difficult. The wavelength is 5000 m, so a one-quarter wavelength antenna would be 1250 m tall, or about 10 times the height of the WWVB antenna towers. As a compromise, some of the missing length was added horizontally to the top hats of this vertical dipole, and the downlead of each antenna is terminated at its own helix house under the top hats. Each helix house contains a large inductor to cancel the capacitance of the short antenna and a variometer (variable inductor) to tune the antenna system. "Using two transmitters and two antennas allows the station to be more efficient. As mentioned earlier, the WWVB antennas are physically much smaller than one quarter wavelength. As the length of a vertical radiator becomes shorter compared to wavelength, the efficiency of the antenna goes down. In other words, it requires more and more transmitter power to increase the effective radiated power. The north antenna system at WWVB has an efficiency of about 50.6%, and the south antenna has an efficiency of about 57.5%. However, the combined efficiency of the two antennas is about 65%. As a result, each transmitter only has to produce a forward power of about 38 kW for WWVB to produce its effective radiated power of 50 kW." 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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