The following are based on your PC clock:
- Local time is the date/time reported by your PC
(as seen by your web browser).
If your PC clock is accurate to a second
then the other time scales displayed above will also be
accurate to within one second.
- UTC, Coordinated Universal Time, popularly known as GMT
(Greenwich Mean Time), or Zulu time.
Local time differs from UTC by the number of hours of your timezone.
- GPS, Global Positioning System time, is the atomic time scale
implemented by the atomic clocks in the GPS ground control stations and
the GPS satellites themselves.
GPS time was zero at 0h 6-Jan-1980 and since it is not perturbed by
leap seconds GPS is now ahead of UTC by
- Loran-C, Long Range Navigation time, is an atomic time scale
implemented by the atomic clocks in Loran-C chain transmitter sites.
Loran time was zero at 0h 1-Jan-1958 and since it is not perturbed by
leap seconds it is now ahead of UTC by
- TAI, Temps Atomique International, is the
international atomic time scale based on a continuous counting
of the SI second. TAI is currently ahead of UTC by
TAI is always ahead of GPS by 19 seconds.
See also: Nixie Tube Leap Second Countdown Clock.
For more information about time scales and leap seconds see:
-
Systems of Time
Time Service Department, U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington, DC
- A brief
history of time scales Steve Allen, UCO/Lick Observatory
-
Le temps UTC/TAI
Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, BIPM UTC/TAI Time Server
-
Leap Seconds
Time Service Department, USNO
- Future of Leap Seconds
Steve Allen, UCO/Lick Observatory
-
Modified Julian Date
Frequently Asked Questions, Time Service Department, USNO
-
Astronomical Time Keeping
Astronomical texts for the layman
-
Astronomical Calendars
MAA Scholar Project
-
Some basic information about the different time scales
by Paul Schlyter
-
Time Scales, UTC, and Leap Seconds
From the Time and Frequency Users Manual
-
Astronomical Times
Richard Fisher, National Radio Astronomy Observatory
-
Loran-C Timing Operations
U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington, DC
-
Loran-C Times of Coincidence (TOC) calculator
-
International Earth Rotation Service (IERS)
General Information
-
A Few Facts Concerning GMT, UT, and the RGO
by Richard B. Langley
-
Time and Frequency FAQ
Time & Frequency Division, NIST
-
Leap Second and UT1-UTC Information
Time & Frequency Division, NIST
-
Time Scales
Time Metrology, National Physics Laboratory (NPL)
-
The Leap Second
Time Metrology, National Physics Laboratory (NPL)
-
Leap seconds: why and how
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB)
-
The Time of Internet
Italian Standard Time, Guided Tour to Time Measurement
-
The Australian National Time System
The Second and International Atomic Time
-
What are all those different kinds of time
Astronomy Frequently Asked Questions
-
Chandra, A Time Tutorial
Definitions of various time systems and formulae
-
The Times of your Life
Solar Time, Julian Days, Sidereal Time
-
Tidbits about TIME
Archives of timezone.com
-
Radio Time Checks
Origins and Meaning of GMT/UTC
-
1972 Troubled Times
Leap Seconds herold[sic] world-wide cataclysm (huh?)
-
Leap Seconds
Urban Legend (huh?)
-
The Greenwich Meridian in the Space Age
Time, Atomic Time, Longitude, etc.
-
The world time system
New Scientist
-
History of the Prime Meridian - Past and Present
by Jeremy Paul
-
Time
Physical fundamentals
-
UTC New Years Y2K
No leap second here!
-
Earth rotation
Difference in seconds between a UT1 and a TAI clock
Do you have comments/questions?
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