Time accuracy superior to telephone time accuracy is available throughout Canada and in many other parts of the world by means of the NRC's radio time signals broadcast continuously from shortwave radio station CHU. If corrections are made for the propagation delay from CHU to the user, and for delays in the user's receiver, an accuracy of better than 1 ms can be obtained. Signal availability at a user's location depends on ionospheric conditions. CHU also broadcasts a time code which can be decoded with common computers and modems.
Three frequencies are used: 3330, 7850, and 14 670 kHz. The transmission mode, upper single sideband with carrier re-inserted, provides time signal service without requiring a special SSB radio, and also provides three standard frequencies. The frequencies are derived from one of a trio of atomic clocks located at the transmitter site. Three clocks are employed to permit majority logic checking. CHU time signals are also derived from these clocks. The clocks at the CHU transmitter site, about 20 km from the NRC's time laboratory, are compared daily with the NRC's primary cesium clocks.
Normally the time broadcast by CHU is accurate to 10-4 s and any offsets of the carrier frequency from UTC(NRC) are less than 5x10-12. UTC(NRC) is the version of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) that is realized at the NRC. It is maintained to within 100 ns of UTC and has a frequency offset of less than 1x10-13.
UTC is the international official time reference. It is constructed by the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM), based on the average of laboratory and commercial atomic clocks located in laboratories around the world. It is steered in frequency using primary cesium clocks located at some of the major time laboratories.
UTC was defined to coordinate atomic clocks so that they could all agree and still loosely follow the irregularities of the astronomical time scale UT1, which is needed in astronomical observations and in celestial navigation. Since 1972, leap seconds have been used to keep UTC within 0.9 s of UT1.
The difference [UT1- UTC] is called DUT1, and this fraction of a second [-0.8 s to +0.8 s] is broadcast by means of an internationally accepted code. To decode the size of DUT1, in tenths of a second, a user counts the number of emphasized seconds markers in one minute. For CHU, the emphasized seconds pulses are split, so that a double tone is heard. When the emphasis is on seconds 1 through 8, DUT1 is positive; and when DUT1 is negative, seconds 9 through 16 are used.
The first minute of each hour commences with a full 1 s pulse of 1000 Hz tone, followed by 9 s of silence, and then the normal pattern of 0.3 s pulses of 1000 Hz at one-second intervals. The normal pattern for each of the next 59 minutes starts with a 0.5 s 1000 Hz pulse, followed by the DUT1 code employing split 0.3 s pulses where required, and normal 0.3 s pulses up to and including that at 28 seconds. The pulse at 29 seconds is omitted. Following the normal pulse at 30 seconds, for a 9 s period, 1000 Hz pulses of 0.01 s occur, each followed by the CHU FSK digital time code described in CHU broadcast codes. The pulses between 40 and 50 seconds are of normal length. In the final 10 s period of each minute a bilingual station identification and time announcement is made, with the 1000 Hz seconds pulses shortened to "ticks". Each minute's announced time refers to the beginning of the pulse which follows. Since April 1, 1990, the announced time is always UTC.
The CHU station is located 15 km southwest of Ottawa at 45° 17' 47" N, 75° 45' 22" W. Main transmitter powers are 3 kW at 3330 and 14 670 kHz, and 5 kW at 7850 kHz. Individual vertical antennas are used for each frequency. The electronics systems feeding the transmitters are duplicated for reliability, and have both battery and generator protection. The generator can also supply the transmitters. The announcements are made by a talking clock using digitally recorded voices. The digital voice announcements entered into service in 1990. The voice in English is that of Harry Mannis (a former CBC announcer) and the voice in French is that of Simon Durivage (of Radio-Canada).
Note:
Any CHU radio signal reproduction, such as rebroadcasting, is prohibited. Pursuant to section 47 of the Radiocommunication Regulations, SOR/96-484, a person who operates radio apparatus in the amateur radio service may only be engaged in communication that does not include the transmission of programming that originates from a broadcasting undertaking. The NRC official time signal broadcast on frequencies 3330 kHz, 7850 kHz and 14670 kHz, is considered to be a broadcast undertaking.
Historical information
Radio station CHU is operated by the NRC. The call letters CHU were first used for Canadian time transmission in 1938, on the frequencies, 3330 kHz, 7335 (7850 since 2009) kHz and 14670 kHz. The 2009 change in frequency was to avoid new interference permitted since 2007, when the International Telecommunications Union reallocated the 7300-7350 kHz band, changing it from fixed service to general broadcast use. After this change, our 7335 kHz transmissions began to be obscured by numerous broadcasters from around the world who started to use that frequency.
Before 1938 the call letters of essentially the same transmissions were VE9OB. The carrier frequency has been the specified standard since 1934; before that the quartz oscillators had been tuned to standard wavelengths. Continuous transmissions at a wavelength of 20.4 m had started in 1933, joining the 40.8 m and 90 m transmissions, which began in 1929 (daytime only). Daily transmission on a wavelength of 52.5 m had begun in 1928 under the call letters 9CC (later VE9CC), but ceased with the startup of 40.8 m operation. 9CC had started experimental time transmission in 1923 on 275 m, and license 3AF had operated in 1922. Thus there is quite a range of possible dates to assign to the establishment of CHU; we lean towards 1929 as being the start of daily time transmissions at essentially the modern frequencies. Of course there has been quite a change in equipment and accuracy over the years, but the largest improvement was with the change to cesium atomic clocks in 1967. In 1970 the responsibility of operating CHU was transferred from the astronomers at the Dominion Observatory to the physicists at the National Research Council.
Since 1970, the National Research Council has been charged with maintaining official time for Canada. The shortwave radio station CHU is one, but only one of the ways that official time is disseminated across Canada.
Following internationally accepted recommendations, Canada and other countries have official time scales in agreement within 10µs. Since CHU's transmissions are well within 100µs of official Canadian time, for all distant users of CHU, the dominant source of time error comes from the radio wave path reflecting off the ionosphere as the radio signal travels from the transmitter (in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) to the user. The time delay is 3.3µs per km of path, and generally varies by less than 1ms due to uncertainties in path including the uncertainty in the number of skips made by the radio wave (reflections down from the ionosphere and back up from the surface of the Earth). For a fixed receiver when the number of skips does not change, the variation in the path delay will usually be less than 100µs. A small additional delay comes from the radio receiver, and may be significant.
Before April 1, 1990, CHU's time announcements were given as Eastern Standard Time. Since that time CHU's time announcements have been given as Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The change from EST to UTC was done to remain in the spirit of the recommendations of the International Consultative Committee on Radio: 'that the standard time broadcasts on standard frequencies be given in UTC'. In a narrow sense, since CHU does not broadcast on the frequencies allocated for frequency standards, these recommendations do not strictly apply to CHU. However, since CHU is received across Canada's six time zones and around the world, we made the change when it became possible technically to change from EST to UTC without difficulty.
The warble tone at seconds 31 to 39 allow any computer with a Bell 103 compatible 300 bps modem to receive and decode an accurate source of time. The details on the CHU broadcast codes can be found here.
Contact us
Reception reports from around the world, are gladly accepted from listeners. We will respond with a QSL card. Please send reception reports to:
Radio Station CHU
1200 Montreal Road
Building M-36
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R6
Email: radio.chu@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca