Creating a Lunar Time Zone: Positioning, Navigation & Timing (PNT) | UNOOSA
By 2040, up to 1,000 people could be living on the Moon. Time moves 56 microseconds a day faster on the Moon. The sun can be up for 14 days at a time, and there are mountains that never experience nights. Thus, the international community needs a common, Moon-tailored way of keeping track of time. As humanity prepares for long-term lunar missions and settlements a reliable navigation and communication system will also be indispensable.
In this video, Dr. Javier Ventura-Traveset—Head of the Navigation Science Office and of European Space Agency Lunar PNT Coordination explains:
🕰️ Why defining a "Moon Time" is critical for future missions
📡 How lunar positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) systems—like the European Space Agency’s Moonlight—will transform exploration
🌍 How UNOOSA and the International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) (ICG) are ensuring global cooperation on lunar navigation
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