DocumentCode
1344995
Title
GPS time synchronization system for K2K
Author
Berns, H.C. ; Wilkes, R.J.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Phys., Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
Volume
47
Issue
2
fYear
2000
fDate
4/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
340
Lastpage
343
Abstract
The K2K (KEK E362) long-baseline neutrino oscillations experiment requires synchronization of clocks with 100 nsec accuracy at the near and far detector sites (KEK and Super-Kamiokande, respectively), which are separated by 250 km. The Global Positioning System (GPS) provides a means for satisfying this requirement at very low cost. In addition to low-resolution time data (day of year, hour, minute, second), commercial GPS receivers output a 1 pulse per sec (1PPS) signal whose leading edge is synchronized with GPS seconds rollovers to well within the required accuracy. For each beam spill trigger at KEK, and each event trigger at Super-Kamiokande, 50 MHz free-running Local Time Clock (LTC) modules at each site provide fractional-second data with 20 nsec ticks. At each site, two GPS clocks run in parallel, providing hardware backup as well as data quality checks
Keywords
Global Positioning System; clocks; synchronisation; 100 ns; 20 ns; 50 MHz; Global Positioning System; K2K; KEK; KEK E362; Local Time Clock; Super-Kamiokande; event trigger; long-baseline neutrino oscillation; time synchronization system; Atomic clocks; Costs; Detectors; Global Positioning System; Hardware; Laboratories; Neutrino sources; Protons; Satellite broadcasting; Synchronization;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/23.846177
Filename
846177
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