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Old January 19th 11, 10:46 AM posted to sci.geo.satellite-nav,rec.aviation.ifr
macpacheco
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Default Earth shattering news for GNSS, commercial availability of ChipScale Atomic Clock (CSAC)

On Jan 19, 4:34*am, Muzaffer Kal wrote:
On Tue, 18 Jan 2011 19:36:20 -0800 (PST), macpacheco









wrote:
Earth shattering news for GNSS, commercial availability of Chip Scale
Atomic Clock (CSAC)


For 1st generation CSAC, amazing:


16 cc volume (1 cu inch)
35 grams weight
115mW of power
4 orders of magnitude better clock stability than typical frequency
crystals found in typical GPS receivers, that means that a CSAC will
drift in about 3 hours what a typical crystal would drift in a single
second. According to the supplier, Symmetricon, this CSAC is already
as accurate as a Caesium atomic clock !


So cost seems to be the only bottleneck before this component is
everywhere ultra high accuracy is desired. With WAAS receivers costing
around US$ 10k, a US$ 200 atomic clock might be an acceptable extra
cost. Although it probably costs a more than that right now (no price
estimates are to be found).


It seems to be $1500 each for small quantities:http://classic.cnbc.com/id/41131245
--
Muzaffer Kal

DSPIA INC.
ASIC/FPGA Design Services

http://www.dspia.com


Great info, thanks Muzaffer. Given typical advancements in this kind
of technology, should mean $500 CSACs for high volume purchasers in
2-3 yrs, good enough for mass usage.