
To address this, a team from the Purple Mountain Observatory in Nanjing built a model that accounts for both the moon’s weaker gravity and its motion through space, allowing events on the moon to be accurately synchronised with clocks used on Earth.
The researchers reported that their method remained accurate to within a few tens of nanoseconds even over 1,000 years, according to a paper published in the December issue of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
Jonathan McDowell, a Harvard astronomer and space historian, said lunar timekeeping was becoming a real engineering need rather than something that could be handled on a case-by-case basis using Earth time, as in the past.
Differences as small as a microsecond could quickly become significant in navigation systems, affecting calculations over timescales of a minute, he said.
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