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Debbie Goldsmith πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈπŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ

I keep seeing the news about lunar time presented as β€œthe Moon is getting its own time zone." What's actually happening is the Moon is getting its own time *standard*. The problem being solved is that time passes slightly more quickly on the Moon compared to Earth (due to General Relativity) and so the Moon needs its own time standard for precise measurements and navigation. UTC is the time standard for measuring time on Earth, and LTC is being created for the Moon.

#GeneralRelativity #time

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Attila Kinali

@dgoldsmith You seem to be knowledgeable on this topic. Could you explain why we do not just compensate for gravitational red shift on the moon the same way we do for the various NMI labs that are at different altitudes and thus run at slightly different rates? Why do we need LTC when just using UTC with the correct definition of the second (i.e. defined at zero gravitational field) would be sufficient?

Winter Trabex

@dgoldsmith

Wait, time passes more quickly on the moon? How does that work? Is it something influenced by planetary gravity?

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