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Blog # 146 – NTN – Timing and Clock Distribution in 5G Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN)
5G NTN timing requires extended timing advance, Doppler aware synchronization, GNSS-assisted delay estimation, and satellite grade oscillator stability. Release 17 introduces NTN specific timing adaptations, but orbital dynamics and feeder link calibration define real-world performance.
Home » Blog » Learning » NTN » Blog # 146 – NTN – Timing and Clock Distribution in 5G Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN)

Precise timing is fundamental to 5G NR performance. In terrestrial networks, synchronization is achieved using GNSS, IEEE 1588v2 (PTP), and SyncE.

In Non Terrestrial Networks (NTN), timing becomes significantly more complex due to:

  1. Long propagation delays
  2. Satellite movement (LEO/MEO)
  3. Doppler induced frequency offsets
  4. Variable feeder link paths
  5. GNSS dependency in space

This article examines how 5G Release 17 addresses timing in NTN systems.


1. Why Timing is Critical in 5G

5G NR relies on accurate synchronization for:

  1. OFDM symbol alignment
  2. HARQ timing
  3. TDD frame alignment
  4. Beamforming coordination
  5. Mobility and handover

Timing requirements are defined in:

  • 3GPP TS 38.300 – NR overall description
  • 3GPP TS 38.211 – Physical channels and modulation
  • 3GPP TS 38.133 – Radio performance requirements

In NTN, maintaining these tolerances across hundreds of kilometers introduces new constraints.


2. Propagation Delay Impact

Typical one way delay:

  1. GEO: ~250–300 ms
  2. MEO: ~50–75 ms
  3. LEO: ~10–20 ms

Consequences:

  1. Extended timing advance required
  2. Larger Random Access windows
  3. HARQ timing reconfiguration
  4. Buffering at MAC/RLC layers

Defined in:

  • 3GPP TR 38.811 – Study on NR to support NTN
  • 3GPP TS 38.213 – Physical layer procedures

Release 17 introduced extended timing advance mechanisms specifically for NTN.


3. GNSS Dependency in NTN

Satellites typically rely on onboard GNSS receivers for:

  1. Orbit determination
  2. Time synchronization
  3. Beam steering reference
  4. Doppler pre compensation

UEs may also use GNSS to:

  1. Estimate propagation delay
  2. Improve open loop timing advance
  3. Support location based mobility procedures

However, GNSS introduces risks:

  1. Signal blockage
  2. Jamming/spoofing
  3. Spaceborne receiver limitations

Mitigation includes atomic clock holdover and multi constellation support.


4. Frequency Stability and Doppler

In LEO, relative velocity can exceed 7 km/s.

Effects:

  1. Doppler shifts of tens of kHz (depending on band)
  2. Rapid frequency drift
  3. Residual synchronization errors

Release 17 supports:

  1. Doppler pre compensation at gateway
  2. UE-assisted frequency correction
  3. Ephemeris based prediction models

Reference:

  • 3GPP TR 38.821 – NTN solutions

Accurate clock stability reduces residual frequency error after Doppler correction.


5. Transparent vs Regenerative Timing Models

Transparent Payload:

  1. gNB clock located on ground
  2. Satellite acts as RF relay
  3. Timing reference originates at gateway
  4. Feeder link delay must be precisely calibrated

Regenerative Payload:

  1. gNB functionality onboard satellite
  2. Satellite requires high stability oscillator
  3. Local scheduling reduces dependency on feeder link timing

Regenerative architectures demand more stringent onboard clock design.


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6. Clock Distribution Architecture

Terrestrial 5G uses:

  1. GNSS at gNB
  2. PTP (IEEE 1588v2) distribution
  3. SyncE frequency alignment

In NTN:

  1. Space segment relies on GNSS + onboard oscillators
  2. Feeder link delay calibration is dynamic
  3. Inter-satellite links may require cross link synchronization

Future LEO mega constellations may require distributed time coordination across satellites.


7. TDD Synchronization Challenges

TDD systems require strict UL/DL frame alignment.

In NTN:

  1. Differential delay across large beams
  2. Moving cell footprints
  3. UE distance variance up to 1000 km

Release 17 adaptations:

  1. Larger guard periods
  2. Flexible slot configurations
  3. GNSS assisted UE alignment

These reduce inter symbol interference risk.


8. Engineering Trade Off

High precision atomic clocks:

  1. Improve stability
  2. Reduce drift
  3. Increase satellite mass and cost

Lower precision oscillators:

  1. Reduce satellite cost
  2. Require more frequent GNSS correction
  3. Increase synchronization overhead

Timing design directly affects system scalability and power consumption.


Conclusion

Timing in NTN is not simply an extension of terrestrial synchronization.

It requires:

  1. Extended timing advance
  2. Doppler-aware frequency correction
  3. GNSS assisted delay estimation
  4. Satellite grade oscillator stability
  5. Feeder link delay calibration

Release 17 establishes the foundational mechanisms, but deployment performance depends on satellite clock design and orbital dynamics.

In NTN, time accuracy is as critical as link budget.


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