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The effects of velocity (special relativity, red curve) and gravitational potential (general relativity, green curve) and total (blue curve) are illustrated here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Orbit_times.svgThe ISS is in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), and orbits at similar altitude to those reachable by the (now defunct) space shuttle. At these altitudes, the gravitational effects are similar to those on Earth's surface. However, the velocity is far higher than Earth's surface (measured relative to an inertial frame of reference based on the center of the Earth), so time on the ISS goes more slowly than time on Earth's surface.At geostationary altitude, the rotational velocity is much slower than the ISS, and farther out of the Earth's gravitational well than the ISS. So time at geostationary altitude runs faster than time on the Earth's surface (or LEO). If you want to do the maths for yourself, see:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_analysis_for_the_Global_Positioning_System#Calculation_of_time_dilation
I asked SpaceX in their Twitter account about the amount of time correction they put into the clocks in their satellites, but I get no reply so far.
I asked about starlink constellation, which operates at low earth orbit.
Quote from: hamdani yusefI asked about starlink constellation, which operates at low earth orbit.The goal of Starlink is to provide broadband communications, not distribute time with atomic-clock accuracy.As the Starlink satellite appears over the horizon, passes somewhere overhead, and disappears towards the far horizon, the frequency suffers significant Doppler shift. The data signal similarly changes rate as the satellite moves towards you and away from you. Simultaneously, it will be moving towards or away from the Earth station serving your district.These Doppler shifts have a far greater impact than the relativistic time dilation. But the Doppler shifts are handled by electronics that tracks the transmit frequency of the satellite.
]I think it's necessary for those satellites to have accurate internal clocks to help locating their trajectories to prevent collisions. At least it would be useful for crosschecking other methods.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 28/12/2020 00:10:43]I think it's necessary for those satellites to have accurate internal clocks to help locating their trajectories to prevent collisions. At least it would be useful for crosschecking other methods.The clocks reset fron the ground every orbit. Once in orbit Every satellite has the same distance to earth and the same gravitation level. Simples.
I think it's necessary for those satellites to have accurate internal clocks to help locating their trajectories to prevent collisions. At least it would be useful for crosschecking other methods.
One day, small, cheap, accurate and robust optical clocks will become available, and then they will be installed on virtually every satellite. This will allow every satellite to measure relativistic effects.- But there have already been enough experiments proving Relativity to extraordinary precision, so I don't know why anyone would bother.
If it's really cheap, why wouldn't they?