Secondary Frequency Standard

In telecommunications, a secondary frequency standard is a frequency standard that does not have inherent accuracy, and therefore must be calibrated against a primary frequency standard. Note: Secondary standards include crystal oscillators and rubidium standards. A crystal oscillator depends for its frequency on its physical dimensions, which vary with fabrication and environmental conditions. A rubidium standard is a secondary standard even though it uses atomic transitions, because it takes the form of a gas cell through which an optical signal is passed. The gas cell has inherent inaccuracies because of gas pressure variations, including those induced by temperature variations. There are also variations in the concentrations of the required buffer gases, which variations cause frequency deviations. Source: from Federal Standard 1037C

 

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repeater
repeating coil
reproduction speed
reradiation
resolution
resonance
response
response time
responsivity
restoration
return loss
rf power margin
ringaround
ringback signal
ringdown
ringer equivalency number
ring latency
round trip delay time
routing indicator
rubidium standard
rural radio service
saturation
scan
schematic
scrambler
screen
second dialtone
security
security kernel
security management
self synchronizing code
semiautomatic switching system
sensitive information
sensitivity
separate channel signaling
serial access
serial transmission
service termination point
shadow loss
shannon's law
sheath
shield
shift register
shot noise