Time Phase Modulation of D101 Compared to Lunar Declination and Earth Rotation Angle

Time phase modulation observed in device D101 compared to earth rotation angle and moon declination over a 30 day period.

Dwayne Esterline

6/27/20241 min read

Device D101 time phase measurement is a cumulative measurement of time progression compared to a perfectly linear time progression. In the case that D101 runs faster than linear time, then the phase advances, and alternately the phase is retarded when D101 runs slower than linear time progression.

The image above represents 30 days of D101 time phase modulation mapped against the Local Apparent Sidereal Angle (x-axis) and the Cosine of moon declination angle. This is a curious selection as the cosine of moon declination is essentially a measure of the distance from earth center to moon center, projected to the earth equatorial plane.

The color mapping represents fast/slow time phase on the order of a tens of nano-seconds from peak to valley.

This combination of variables was selected through experimentation and provides a robust representation of the four maxima and minima daily.

To fully understand what is being measured, read up on the device construction elsewhere on this site.