Gernot M. R. Winkler

Gernot Maria Rudolph Winkler PhD (1922 October 17 – 2016 April 30) was responsible for the Time Service Department of the United States Naval Observatory from 1966 to 1996. [1]

Winkler oversaw the introduction of caesium beam based Coordinated Universal Time based on hyperfine transitions and an internationally transportable “flying clock”.

This in turn led Winkler to promote precision global positioning techniques (initially by time-reliable surface broadcasts in the LORAN and Omega radio-beacon chains, later by Two-way satellite time and frequency transfer (TWSTT) [1]

Early life

Born in the Austrian town of Frohnleiten which is the home of a technology institute (Technisches Büro für Luftfahrt und Maschinenbau). The young Gernot was the son of Gustav and Eleanor (Née Schneider) Winkler. His interest in astronomy was inspired by German spaceflight pioneer Hermann Oberth when he was about 12. The science fiction writer Jules Verne was also a favourite. During WWII was drafted into the Wehrmacht and arrested by the US army in Italy.

In 1947 1947, Winkler resumed his studies at the University of Graz. In 1952 he obtained a PhD in theoretical physics and was an associate of the Kanzelhoehe Solar Observatory

In 1956 he and his fellow Austrian, Fritz Reder arrived in the United States to work in the microwave resonance branch of the Signal Corps, joining the USNO in 1956 [2]

Recognition

Winkler was awarded several honours including:

References

  1. 1 2 Dick, Stephen (1989). "Gernot M. R. Winkler memorial: "An Expert on, and a Definer of, Time"". interview. Part of USNO Sky and Ocean Joined (2003). IEEE/USNO.
  2. Anon (2016-04-30). "Obituary of Gernot M Winkler". American Astronomical Society.
  3. Richard L. Sydnor (editorial chair) (1994-12-08). "NASA Conference Publication 3302 26th Annual Precise Time and Time Interval (PTTI) Applications and Planning Meeting" (PDF). California Institute of Technology: Jet Propulsion Laboratory.


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