Quartz Mars Clock

Mars Clock

  Keeps 24 hour mean solar time on the planet Mars


Keep track of what time of day it is at the Mars Rover or Phoenix Lander sites. A Martian day is very close to an Earth day --- about 24 Earth hours plus 39-1/2 minutes. This means a normal quartz clock can't keep Martian time. We have created a quartz clock with a timebase adjusted to conform to mean Mars time. The clock divides the Martian day into 24 hours. Once you have set the clock to the local Mars time at one of the Mars lander locations, you can tell at a glance what time of Martian day it is for the mission site.

The clock has a 24 hour dial with a seconds hand and runs on four "AA" batteries. A wheel on the back of the movement allows you to make coarse adjustments to the time displayed. A small circuit board with two push buttons allows precise synchronization of the second hand. One button causes the second hand to advance at twice normal speed. This makes it possible to advance the time if the clock is slow. The other button stops the clock until the first button is pressed. This allows you to stop the clock for a while if it's fast.

The clock is hand-tuned to run within one or two parts per million of the mean Martian rate. The clock should be accurate to one or two seconds per week.

Our Mars clock has been ordered by Nasa to assist the ground crew of the Phoenix Lander mission.

The current Martian time at the Rover landing sites can be found at the Nasa web site:
    http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/home

The home page of the Phoneix Mars Mission is here:
    http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/

Availability
This page is maintained for histprical reasons only. I am no longer making the Mars Clock. I sold a total of four of them in four years. Talk about a crackpot idea..... The Mars Clock was $125 for an 8" dial and $150 for a 12" dial.

I also used to make a quartz sidereal clock.

 

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