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Time signal
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===Dedicated time signal broadcasts=== The telegraphic distribution of time signals was made obsolete by the use of AM, FM, [[shortwave radio]], Internet [[Network Time Protocol]] [[Server (computing)|servers]] as well as [[atomic clock]]s in [[Satellite Navigation|satellite navigation]] systems. Time signals have been transmitted by radio since 1905.<ref name=Burns04>{{cite book | first=R.W. | last=Burns | title=Communications: An international history of the formative years | publisher=IET | year=2004 | isbn=0863413277 | page=121 }}</ref> There are dedicated [[Radio clock#List of radio time signal stations|radio time signal stations]] around the world. Time stations operating in the [[longwave]] radio band have highly predictable [[radio propagation]] characteristics, which gives low uncertainty in the received time signals. Stations operating in the [[shortwave]] band can cover wider areas with relatively low-power transmitters, but the varying distance that the signal travels increases the uncertainty of the time signal on a scale of milliseconds.<ref name=McCarthy-Seidelmann-2009>{{cite book |first1=Dennis D. |last1=McCarthy |first2=P. Kenneth |last2=Seidelmann |year=2009 |title=Time: From Earth rotation to atomic physics |publisher=Wiley-VCH |isbn=978-3-527-40780-4 |page=256}}</ref> Radio time signal stations broadcast the time in both audible and machine-readable [[time code]] form that can be used as references for [[radio clock]]s and [[Watch#Electronic|radio-controlled watches]]. Typically, they use a national or regional [[longwave]] digital signal; for example, station [[WWVB]] in the U.S. .<ref name=McCarthy-Seidelmann-2009/> The audio portions of the shortwave [[WWV (radio station)|WWV]] and [[WWVH]] broadcasts can also be heard by telephone. The time announcements are normally delayed by less than 30 ms when using land lines from within the continental United States, and the stability (delay variation) is generally {{nobr|less than 1 ms.}} However, when [[mobile phones]] are used, the delays are often more than 100 ms, due to the multiple access methods used to share cell channels. In rare instances when the telephone connection is made by satellite, the time is delayed by 250β500 ms. The audio from the broadcasts is available by telephone by dialling U.S. numbers {{nobr|(303) 499-7111}} for [[WWV (radio station)|WWV]] (Colorado), and {{nobr|(808) 335-4363}} for [[WWVH]] (Hawaii). Calls (which are ''not'' toll-free) are disconnected after 2 minutes. [[File:Low cost DCF77 receiver.jpg|thumb|A low cost [[Low frequency|LF]] [[radio clock]] receiver, antenna left, receiver right.]] [[Loran-C]] time signals formerly were also used for radio clock synchronization, by augmenting their highly accurate frequency transmissions with external measurements of the offsets of LORAN navigation signals against time standards.
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