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Lunar coordinated time #291
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I had fun thinking about this all day today. Well, relatively all-day. |
Nice ! And I see you've implemented it in Python here. @philiplinden also worked with time dilation here. If LCT is to work similarly to the TDB or ET time systems, then it'll need a reference epoch from which the drift happens continuously. If that reference is set to 01 Jan 2000 at noon, then we'd have accumulated 520 ms 62 μs difference with Earth time so far in these 8859 days. Calculations for reference:
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If it can be of interest, I have just uploaded Frederic Meynadier (BIPM) and Pascale Defraigne (Obs. Brussels) presentation at European Frequency and Time Forum (EFTF) this June 2024 on the topic at http://jmfriedt.free.fr/EFTF2024_moon.mp4 |
Superb, thank you! I would be very interested in seeing the slides too if you can ask for a copy. Thanks. |
@jmfriedt Can you send me a copy of your slides? [email protected] ❤️ |
Should be now available at http://jmfriedt.free.fr/Meynadier_Defraigne_EFTF2024 |
fixed :) http://jmfriedt.free.fr/Meynadier_Defraigne_EFTF2024.pdf thank you!!!! |
By the end of 2026, NASA should have a formal definition of LCT. Hifitime should provide some example reference to support that.
https://www.reuters.com/science/white-house-directs-nasa-create-time-standard-moon-2024-04-02/
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