Smithsonian
  • Navigating
    at Sea
    • Challenges of Sea Navigation
    • Navigating Without a Clock
    • The Longitude Problem
    • The U.S. Goes to Sea
    • Navigate at Sea! Activity
  • Navigating
    in the Air
    • Challenges of Air Navigation
    • Early Air Navigators
    • Navigation at War
    • Navigate the Skies! Activity
  • Navigating
    in Space
    • Challenges of Space Navigation
    • Reaching for the Moon
    • Navigating in Deep Space
    • Navigate in Space! Activity
  • Satellite Navigation
    • Challenges of Satellite Navigation
    • Reliable Global Navigation
    • Global Positioning System (GPS)
    • Who Uses Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation
    for Everyone
    • Meet a Professional Navigator
    • Personal Navigation Stories
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research
  • Visit the Exhibition

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Time and Navigation Home
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Time and Navigation
The untold story of getting from here to there.
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  • Navigating at Sea
  • Navigating in the Air
  • Navigating in Space
  • Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation for Everyone
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research Journal
  • Visit the Exhibition
  • Challenges of Satellite Navigation
    • Navigation Gone Wrong: Soviets Shoot Down an Airliner
  • Reliable Global Navigation
    • Inertial Navigation
      • Charles Stark Draper
      • Developing Inertial Navigation
    • The First Satellite Navigation System
      • Transit Satellites
      • Navigating a Submarine
    • Improving Satellite Navigation
      • Clocks in Space
      • Evolving Solutions
  • Global Positioning System (GPS)
    • GPS Begins
    • The Satellite Constellation
    • Synchronized Accurate Time
    • Risks to the System
    • International Systems
  • Who Uses Satellite Navigation
    • Military Applications
    • Civilian Applications
      • The Commercial Market
      • Improving Accuracy
      • Looking Ahead

Explore More

Display for GPS Precision-Agriculture Guidance System  »
NRL-Rubidium Frequency Standard »
Precision Lightweight GPS Receiver (PLGR) »
Magnavox Land Navigator »
Latitude and Longitude »

Evolving Solutions

TIMATION (TIME/NAVIGATION)

Developed by: The Naval Research Laboratory (NRL)
When: 1964
Purpose: To test whether accurate time signals sent from a satellite could provide a worldwide navigation system.
How it worked: TIMATION satellites carried very stable time references. These were used to test the concept of measuring position and distance to satellites based on the travel time of radio signals.

TIMATION satellites carried very stable time references. These were used to test the concept of measuring position and distance to satellites based on the travel time of radio signals.

Plan 621B

Developed by: Air Force Space and Missile Systems Organization and The Aerospace Corporation
When: Reached the testing stage in the late 1960s
Purpose: To help identify the locations of aircraft.
How it worked: Called for satellites to transmit a jam-resistant signal to aircraft, which would enable navigators to determine their latitude, longitude, and altitude.

SECOR (Sequential Collation of Range)

Developed by: U.S. Army
When: 1964 to 1969
Purpose: For mapping research to find exact positions of remote places far from the continents, especially Pacific islands.
How it worked: The satellites worked in tandem with four portable ground stations.

The Army successfully launched nine SECOR satellites.

Civilian Satellite Time

The U.S. Department of Commerce established a precise time service based on satellite signals in 1974. The National Bureau of Standards provided the time. The electric power industry found the time service useful for synchronizing AC generators to move electricity from one part of the power grid to another. The signals were transmitted by Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES) of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) until the end of 2004.

 

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Technicians Building a GOES Satellite
Preparation of GOES spacecraft launched during the 1980s.
Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

520-spac0271.jpg

Technicians Building a GOES Satellite
Preparation of GOES spacecraft launched during the 1970s.
Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

nasm2012-02128.jpg

Prototype GOES Time Receiver
This prototype satellite signal receiver was developed around 1976.
Credit: National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution.
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  • Navigating at Sea
    • Challenges of Sea Navigation
    • Navigating Without a Clock
    • The Longitude Problem
    • The U.S. Goes to Sea
    • Navigate at Sea! Activity
  • Navigating in the Air
    • Challenges of Air Navigation
    • Early Air Navigators
    • Navigation at War
    • Navigate the Skies! Activity
  • Navigating in Space
    • Challenges of Space Navigation
    • Reaching for the Moon
    • Navigating in Deep Space
    • Navigate in Space! Activity
  • Satellite Navigation
    • Challenges of Satellite Navigation
    • Reliable Global Navigation
    • Global Positioning System (GPS)
    • Who Uses Satellite Navigation
  • Navigation for Everyone
    • Meet a Professional Navigator
    • Personal Navigation Stories
  • Timeline of Innovation
  • Artifacts
  • Learning Resources
  • Multimedia Gallery
  • Research
  • Visit the Exhibition
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