WWV is the callsign of NIST's shortwave radio station located in Fort Collins, Colorado. WWV's main function is the continuous dissemination of official U.S. Government time signals. The station broadcasts simultaneously on five distinct frequencies: 2.5 MHz, 5 MHz, 10 MHz, 15 MHz and 20 MHz. These carrier frequencies, as well as the time signals, are derived from a set of atomic clocks located at the transmitter site, which themselves are traceable to NIST's primary frequency standard in Boulder, Colorado using such techniques as GPS common-view observations. WWV is partnered with radio station WWVH, located in Hawaii. Onsite with WWV in Fort Collins is also radio station WWVB, which operates on the low frequency of 60 kHz.
WWV is the oldest continuously-operating radio station in the United States, first going on the air from Washington, D.C. in May of 1920, approximately six months before the launch of KDKA. The station was formerly located in Greenbelt, Maryland, on land which now is part of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. WWV moved to its present location at Fort Collins on December 1, 1966, enabling better reception of its signal throughout the continental United States.
WWV is one of a rare number of radio stations west of the Mississippi River with a call sign beginning with W. The W callsign stems from the station's early locations in D.C. and Maryland—the callsign was maintained when the federal government moved the station to Colorado—as well as the fact that WWV, being a government station, does not fall within the FCC's jurisdiction with respect to call signs.
In most minutes of the hour, WWV transmits standard audio frequencies of 500Hz.ogg and 600Hz.ogg, switching between the two frequencies each minute. These two frequencies are used to synchronize 50 Hz and 60 Hz electrical power supplies respectively. WWV also transmits a 440Hz.ogg tone (a pitch commonly used in music for the note A above middle C) every hour at two minutes past, except for the first hour of the UTC day. Since the 440 Hz tone is only transmitted once per hour, many chart recorders may use this tone to mark off each hour of the day, and likewise, the omission of the 440 Hz tone once per day can be used to mark off each twenty-four hour period.
WWV's broadcasts are not limited to time-of-day and standard time intervals. At 8, 9 and 10 minutes past the hour, WWV stops transmitting its standard audio signals (except for the ticks and time code) to broadcast regular high-seas weather warnings. At 14 and 15 minutes past the hour, reports relating to the health of the U.S. Department of Defense's GPS service are transmitted. And at 18 minutes past the hour, a special "geophysical alert" report is transmitted, containing information on solar activity and shortwave radio propagation conditions. No audio tones are transmitted from WWV between 43 and 51 minutes inclusive past the hour.
Between 1945 and 1971, WWV transmitted an ID and the time-of-day in Morse code. During that time, the standard audio signals alternated between 440 Hz and 600 Hz, instead of the 500 and 600 Hz signals used today. Voice announcements of time-of-day began on WWV in 1950. Before 1967, WWV's time-of-day announcements were in local time of the transmitter site. During a leap second, a binary zero is transmitted in the time code.
"National Institute of Standards and Technology Time. This is radio station WWV, Fort Collins, Colorado, broadcasting on internationally allocated standard carrier frequencies of 2.5, 5, 10, 15, and 20 megahertz, providing time of day, standard time interval, and other related information. Inquiries regarding these transmissions may be directed to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Radio Station WWV, 2000 E. County Road 58, Fort Collins, Colorado 80524."