cthia wrote:Joat42 wrote:I don't see a problem for coordinating an attack down to the second.
The TF's transits to their respective staging areas in advance, take stellar readings, compensate for distance between the different areas and calculate the time down to microseconds.
Absolutely Impossible.
It's absolutely possible.
cthia wrote:There are just too many opportunities for error to be introduced into any calculations, then comes error introduced by the conversion. And this is all dependent on a particular system's track of time to be dependable to your needs. Heck, Grayson's stubbornness to maintain Old Earth's A.D. Anno Domini is the type of problems you can expect. Then there's the error introduced by a second being added back in on Sol time, the actual revolution of Earth, yatta yatta yatta.
Consider this site and all of the potential pitfalls that can conspire to make you unfashionably late for the party. . .
What Is International Atomic Time (TAI)?
Joat42 wrote:I think you don't really grasp how you go about synchronizing clocks on a galactic scale. You don't care about what a particular systems track of time is - you just choose one to use as the common time reference. Then measure a couple of pulsars, they have a known decay rate measured in milli- and nanoseconds per day and that means you can compare their spinrates and pulse dispersion to get an accurate time comparable to an atomic clock - plus you get an accurate spatial position.
If you don't believe me, you can read about the basics in Binary and Millisecond Pulsars by Duncan R. Lorimer.
cthia wrote:Oh, I do. I'm just also aware of that annoying little concept I've been trying to introduce into the forum since I've been a member, to no avail. The human element.
Now we want to mix it with the problems associated with synchronizing clocks with manmade instruments across the galaxy? Pfft.
What problems? You are essentially saying that they can build spaceships than can travel through space and hyperspace several hundred light years accurately but they can't build a timepiece that's accurate?
cthia wrote:Now, the human element tells me that a warship will want to be synchronized with the time down on planet, keeping appointments and the like. I'd also imagine that most systems have an internal pulse signal sent out in system that ships can use to synchronize clocks. But if any one of you really think clocks are synchronized in all parts of the galaxy, then I have to warn you. . .
Most navies today usually use GMT/UTC for operations and they may add the local timezone in logs etc. When entering a port with a different timezone they usually start adjusting in increments what the local timezone should be a couple of days before they arrive. I doubt it's much different from a ship in Honorverse.
And why wouldn't they want to synchronize clocks between different parts of the galaxy? Just think of it as GST, Galactic Standard Time. It doesn't have to be exact to the millisecond just good enough to avoid administrative, legal and navigational problems - especially the last one since relativistic effects are commonplace.
cthia wrote:All orders are final and nonrefundable on that swampland.
That's your opinion, which means it's hardly final in any way.
cthia wrote:I know it will be easy to do in the MBS, what I meant is that I'm surprised if it is done. I wouldn't expect it to be off by much, but minutes wouldn't surprise me.
I can guarantee that clocks in the MBS are synchronized down to at least a second, because it's so easy to do. You only need a couple of atomic clocks placed strategically in the system that blares out their time. Just think of it as GPS-satellites on a grander scale.
cthia wrote:Pulsars aren't the problem. Man's instruments are.
Did you know that our Man-made GPS-satellites had a maximum drift of 10ns during the period 2005 to 2015, and if you added the UTC offset data it was 2ns. Man's instruments are so very bad... I wonder how bad they will become after 2000 years of refinement...