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Photons, spacecraft, atomic clocks and Einstein – fundamental physics in the space environment - Audio

41m · Lunch Hour Lectures - Autumn 2011 - Audio · 08 Nov 10:22

Satellites designed, built and launched by humans orbit the earth to carry out a myriad of tasks, friendly and hostile, commercial and scientific. Many of these missions supply critical data to model, mitigate and predict planet-scale processes such as El Nino events, sea level rise, plate tectonics and the earthquake cycle. Spacecraft move at 4 - 8 kilometres per second, and are between 500 and 20,000 km above the earth’s surface but for scientific purposes we need to know where they are to within a few centimetres, and we need to know the time they transmit their signals at the nano-second level. This lecture explains how this is achieved using concepts from fundamental physics.

The episode Photons, spacecraft, atomic clocks and Einstein – fundamental physics in the space environment - Audio from the podcast Lunch Hour Lectures - Autumn 2011 - Audio has a duration of 41:09. It was first published 08 Nov 10:22. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

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