What time is it on the Moon? We might soon know (2024)

What time is it on the Moon? We might soon know (1)

An artist's conception of astronauts at work on the Moon. Credit: NASA.

By the end of this decade, the Moon will be bustling with activity. Our closest celestial neighbor will witness the arrival of the first batch of astronauts since the Apollo era over half a century ago. Dozens of robotic explorers will be placed on and around it by multiple countries vying for permanent bases on its dark, pockmarked surface, as well. As a revival of the lunar race inches closer, scientists have just begun working out a key question: What time is it on the Moon?

It turns out the simple question has a complicated answer. So far, lunar missions functioned on the time of their respective home countries. However, early last year the European Space Agency (ESA) deemed this system unsustainable for the upcoming swell of Moon missions.

Without a standard time for the Moon, “there’s a risk that something could go horribly wrong,” says Catherine Heymans, an astrophysicist at Edinburgh University in the U.K. “This clock does need to be defined.” Multiple spacecraft from different countries are expected to be on or around the Moon at the same time, underscoring the need for a common lunar time — and by extension a navigation system — that would facilitate real-time communications, avoid collisions, and carry out joint operations, per the ESA.

On April 2, over a year after ESA identified the issue, the White House directed NASA to set up the new standardized lunar time by the end of 2026. This Coordinated Lunar Time (LTC) is a necessity for the “safety and accuracy” of future Moon missions, Steve Welby, the deputy director for national security at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said in a statement on April 2.

“The White House intervention is very helpful because it really puts the foot on the accelerator to get this to happen ahead of the planned Artemis landing by the end of 2026,” says Heymans.

Additionally, a consistent lunar time is required to create the Moon’s own GPS, said Welby. Currently, scientists depend on a network of radio antennas to routinely ping spacecraft and calculate the time it takes for the spacecraft to ping back, from which scientists zero in on their locations. However, the Moon’s global navigation satellite system (GNSS), a small constellation of satellites that space agencies hope to accomplish by 2030, could provide better position tracking the same way GPS provides timing and location data to smartphones and in-car maps here on Earth.

Timekeeping on the Moon

To us earthlings, time doesn’t change. Even when you’re very bored and feel time is passing by excruciatingly slowly, the seconds tick by at the same pace as always — each second defined as 9,192,631,770 energy transitions within a cesium atom, which is the decades-long, ultra-precise method of universal timekeeping.

Time moves just a tad faster on the Moon, where gravity is one-sixth that of Earth. For instance, if you were to fly a clock from Earth – and wait the 50 years it would take for the offset to build up – the lunar clock would run a second faster than the one on Earth.

“It feels like science fiction, but it’s not,” says Heymans. “This is a very solid prediction of the theory of general relativity, one of the best tested theories that we have that explains the fabric of our universe.”

Related: How long is a year on other planets? | How much you’d weigh on other planets

According to relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein over a century ago, atomic clocks placed at different gravitational fields would tick at different rates. This is true for astronauts aboard the International Space Station as well, but their orbit is sufficiently close to Earth for them to calibrate their clocks to Earth’s Universal Coordinated Time (UTC). Human and robotic explorers staying long-term on the Moon, however, would very slowly inch away from the time on Earth. “It’s a very, very subtle difference,” says Heymans. “Time isn’t absolute.”

What time is it on the Moon? We might soon know (2)

That minuscule difference wouldn’t be a bother if there was only one crew working on the Moon, in which case these changes could be easily accounted for, she added. Given the surge of interest from multiple nations, however, “accurate time measurement becomes even more imperative.”

NASA’s proposed LTC time zone is “a system that, while independent, maintains traceability to Earth’s Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) to facilitate seamless time conversion,” says Julian Coltre, public affairs officer in NASA’s Space Operations Mission Directorate.

Lunar timekeepers

It is unclear just how the space agencies will establish time on the Moon, and many technical details are yet to be worked out. One of the open questions is whether Moon time should be maintained by placing atomic clocks on the Moon or be synchronized with Earth, in which case a relay system would need to continuously communicate with our planet to register the time and convey that to lunar habitants.

“This will take some studying and planning, and that’s how the agency will begin the process,” says Coltre. To learn about how LTC relates to UTC, “NASA may seek to perform a demonstration mission with clocks on the lunar surface based on atomic clocks that fly on spacecraft today.”

The wackiest of all ideas is to time flashes of light from faraway spinning stars known as pulsars, which are immensely magnetized neutron stars that birth out of collapsed remnants of dead stars. As they rotate, electromagnetic radiation blasted from their magnetic poles flash in Earth’s direction like a lighthouse beacon — a predictable “pulse” that astronomers observe regularly with radio telescopes. Although scientists can measure time with significantly lower precision using pulsars than they do with atomic clocks, the stars wouldn’t demand calibration like degrading clocks would, thus offering centuries-long stability.

While it is interesting to consider whether the Moon would have multiple time zones like Earth does, NASA “currently doesn’t see a use case for multiple time zones on the Moon,” says Coltre.

We use 24 time zones set one hour apart, which have been adopted to regulate day and night worldwide based on Earth’s rotation. A day on the Moon lasts for two Earth weeks, meaning astronauts would invariably need to sleep for portions of local days and work during local nights, rendering different time zones unnecessary, says Heymans.

While these issues are technical at heart, they represent a paradigm shift in timekeeping, which has leaped from tracking the sun and stars, then relying on clocks, to now establishing the same technology beyond Earth.

What time is it on the Moon? We might soon know (2024)

FAQs

What time zone is on the moon? ›

Currently, the moon does not have an independent timekeeping system. Instead, previous missions to the moon used their time zone from Earth, ESA officials said. Astronauts would be synchronized with Houston, Moscow or whatever time zone in which the mission headquarters was located.

What is the time of day on the moon? ›

In fact, the Moon rotates on its axis once for every orbit it makes around Earth. So one day on the Moon is about 29.5 Earth days. The dark, or night, lasts for about half that time. However, because the Moon's rotation and revolution are equal, the same side of the Moon always faces Earth.

Can you tell what time it is based on the moon? ›

The moon is more or less exactly where the sun would be in the sky during daytime, except that the times on the sundial will be 12 hours too early. And of course, if you can see the moon, you can watch its progress across the sky and estimate the time in the same way that you would with the sun.

What is the date and time on the moon? ›

The Moon doesn't currently have an independent time. Each lunar mission uses its own timescale that is linked, through its handlers on Earth, to coordinated universal time, or UTc — the standard against which the planet's clocks are set.

Is there an atomic clock on the moon? ›

Due to the moon's lower gravity and its motion relative to Earth, moon time passes 56 microseconds faster each earth day. As a result, an atomic clock on Earth would run at a different rate than an atomic clock on the moon.

What is the time on the moon compared to Earth? ›

That's how much faster time on the Moon lapses compared to Earth. So according to (1) formula while on Earth passes 24 hours, on the Moon passes 1.000000000665×24 hours≈1 day+57 μs.

How long is 1 year on Earth on the moon? ›

Why is the moon still out at 4pm? ›

Because of the Earth's rotation, the moon is above the horizon roughly 12 hours out of every 24. Since those 12 hours almost never coincide with the roughly 12 hours of daylight in every 24 hours, the possible window for observing the moon in daylight averages about 6 hours a day.

Why is the moon out at 1pm? ›

The Earth's daily revolution on its axis means that the Moon is actually above the horizon for about 12 hours out of every 24. Usually, some portion of that time will be during daylight – you just need to look carefully, because its brightness is so much less than the Sun's.

Will the moon be in the same spot every night? ›

The way the Moon looks to us is continually changing. It moves across the sky rapidly over the course of a night. And from night to night it rises and falls at different times and in different parts of the sky.

How do they tell time in space? ›

It is based upon carefully maintained atomic clocks and is highly stable.

Does the moon need its own time zone? ›

The creation of a lunar time zone would require international agreements. Due to the moon's lower gravity and its motion relative to Earth, moon time passes 56 microseconds faster each earth day. As a result, an atomic clock on Earth would run at a different rate than an atomic clock on the moon.

What is the time zone of space? ›

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station, which is in low Earth orbit, follow Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).

What time zone is the International Space Station? ›

With so much scope for chronological confusion, it's no wonder that the ISS needs to be locked to a consistent time. The zone of choice is Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), which is equivalent to GMT.

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