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1923
Improving Radio Reception
NIST was one
of the first radio broadcasters, initially transmitting music and
speech and then pioneering a market and crop report service. The
purpose was research, not entertainment; the Institute sought to
overcome the technical limitations of this emerging medium. A major
problem with early radio was poor reception, caused by interference
among stations that veered off assigned frequencies.
To help stations
control their transmissions, the Institute established a standard
of frequency and began broadcasting precise frequency signals over
its laboratory transmitter, WWV, in 1923. As shown in the photo
on the right, NIST radio station WWV had two transmitting antenna
towers in 1923, a short one (on the left) for short waves and another
one for standard transmissions. It was the start of a service that
continues to this day; time signals were added in 1945.
NIST also performed
important research that greatly improved understanding of why radio
reception sometimes fades out suddenly. After collecting copious
amounts of data, researchers confirmed the underlying problem as
solar activity, later correlated with numbers of sunspots. The groups
method of predicting sunspot numbers proved useful for decades.
Today, WWV
and WWVB (in Colorado) and sister station WWVH (in Hawaii) serve
radio and television stations, power and telephone companies, the
financial community, scientists and engineers in many fields, computer
networks, and navigators. These NIST frequency services enable laboratories
to calibrate precision oscillators to an accuracy much better than
one-thousandth of a second in three years.
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