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Date: 30 Aug 2007 00:33:20
From: Radium
Subject: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Hi: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? Thanks, Radium
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 14:20:18
From: Steve
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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laura halliday wrote: > The ITU definition of "radio" ends at the top of EHF, at 300 GHz. > However, this is more a reflection of the technical state of the > art at the time the definition was made. As Laura and others point out, all such definitions are somewhat arbitrary, though I suppose the above is as good as any. > The usual agreement is that it's radio astronomy when the > incoming signals are electronically detected (e.g. diodes) and > processed. It's optical/infrared astronomy when the incoming > signals are measured by a bolometer or other non-electronic > means. There is, naturally, some crossover. If you define "radio" as employing _coherent_ detection, which I think is what Laura is getting at here, then the limit 30 years ago was about 3E13 Hz, i.e., 10 microns in the infrared. The limit today may be higher; laboratory physics experiments have been done with higher frequencies, but I'm not aware of any astronomical observations. The technique is entirely radio-like: mix the incoming signal with a local oscillator (laser in this case), then amplify and detect the beat frequencies. As others have written in response to the OP's additional query, none of this has anything to do with amplitude modulation or sound.
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 21:45:44
From: Androcles
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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"Steve" <willner@cfa.harvard.edu > wrote in message news:1189027218.946779.303860@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... : : laura halliday wrote: : > The ITU definition of "radio" ends at the top of EHF, at 300 GHz. : > However, this is more a reflection of the technical state of the : > art at the time the definition was made. : : As Laura and others point out, all such definitions are somewhat : arbitrary, though I suppose the above is as good as any. : : > The usual agreement is that it's radio astronomy when the : > incoming signals are electronically detected (e.g. diodes) and : > processed. It's optical/infrared astronomy when the incoming : > signals are measured by a bolometer or other non-electronic : > means. There is, naturally, some crossover. : : If you define "radio" as employing _coherent_ detection, which I think : is what Laura is getting at here, then the limit 30 years ago was : about 3E13 Hz, i.e., 10 microns in the infrared. The limit today may : be higher; laboratory physics experiments have been done with higher : frequencies, but I'm not aware of any astronomical observations. The : technique is entirely radio-like: mix the incoming signal with a local : oscillator (laser in this case), then amplify and detect the beat : frequencies. : : As others have written in response to the OP's additional query, none : of this has anything to do with amplitude modulation or sound. I did a living room experiment with my TV's remote control, it seems to be adequately modulated, changing channels, raising and lowering sound, muting and so on quite reliably. I expect laboratory physics experiments could do it at optical frequencies if they really tried hard (defining radio as employing _coherent_ detection, that is).
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 08:31:19
From: laura halliday
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 5, 7:51 am, Martin Brown <
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Date:
From: Martin Brown
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 15:42:51
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1189003879.595561.106020@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, Martin Brown <
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Date: 04 Sep 2007 08:32:43
From: laura halliday
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 3, 12:11 am, Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com > wrote: > On Sep 2, 11:42 pm, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > > Btw, did you know that you can use an FM radio to observe meteor > > showers? > > I didn't know that. > > > CHoose a radio station which normally is a little bit too > > far away to hear, then direct your antenna towards it. Next, wait for > > the meteors - and listen to your radio station briefly as its radio > > waves are reflected against the meteor trail.... > > Does the meteor shower make a buzzing sound on FM radio stations? No. You hear brief bursts of the station, reflected off the ionization trail. This happens with television too. VHF signals can reflect off other things too, like auroras and patches of intense ionization in the E layer ("E Layer Skip"). Sporadic E signals can be extremely strong. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Non sequitur. Your ACKS are Grid: CN89mg uncoordinated." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Nomad the Network Engineer
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Date: 04 Sep 2007 20:12:48
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188919963.900288.20950@o80g2000hse.googlegroups.com >, laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com > wrote: > This happens with television too. VHF signals can reflect > off other things too, like auroras and patches of intense > ionization in the E layer ("E Layer Skip"). Sporadic E > signals can be extremely strong. ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few years. And UHF signals don't reflect as well off sporadic E layes. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 07 Sep 2007 10:17:34
From: Greg
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Yes I think top-posting is the way to go these days, a normal PC screen holds alot more text than in the old days, and people reply to specific topics so the people already know what it's all about, and if I reply to a specific question I'll quote that one ,so kill me :) Actually (not complaining - just noting for those who don't know) you can also receive single meteors entering the atmosphere, not only meteor shower. Tuning the SSB radio to a tv carrier far far away will give you a 'ping' every time a meteor hits between you and the station, the farther away the more pings you get. http://www.gravitywell.org/misc/misc.htm to show you what it sounds like (no I'm not a webdesigner either :) To the best of my knowledge the station I'm tuned in on is in the baltic, and I live in Sweden, so across the entire baltic sea I get to hear alot of pings... I also have a feeling they'll continue using analogue tv for a while. >> This happens with television too. VHF signals can reflect >> off other things too, like auroras and patches of intense >> ionization in the E layer ("E Layer Skip"). Sporadic E >> signals can be extremely strong. > > ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last > VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already > have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. > Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few > years. > > And UHF signals don't reflect as well off sporadic E layes. > > -- > ---------------------------------------------------------------- > Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN > e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se > WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/ //Greger Project Argus station JO89sn Bålsta - SWEDEN
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Date: 07 Sep 2007 10:20:55
From: Androcles
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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The problem with top posting is the respondent doesn't actually need to read what you said. -- 'we establish by definition that the "time" required by light to travel from A to B equals the "time" it requires to travel from B to A' because I SAY SO and you have to agree because I'm the great genius, STOOOPID, don't you dare question it. -- Rabbi Albert Einstein http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Smart/tAB=tBA.gif 'we establish by definition that the "time" required by light to travel from A to B doesn't equal the "time" it requires to travel from B to A in the stationary system, obviously.' -- Heretic Jan Bielawski, assistant light-bulb changer. Ref: news:1188363019.673281.67710@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com "SR is GR with G=0." -- Uncle Stooopid. The Uncle Stooopid doctrine: http://sound.westhost.com/counterfeit.jpg "What can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence." -- Uncle Stooopid. "Counterfactual assumptions yield nonsense. If such a thing were actually observed, reliably and reproducibly, then relativity would immediately need a major overhaul if not a complete replacement." -- Humpty Roberts. Rabbi Albert Einstein in 1895 failed an examination that would have allowed him to study for a diploma as an electrical engineer at the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule in Zurich (couldn't even pass the SATs). According to Phuckwit Duck it was geography and history that Einstein failed on, as if Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule would give a damn. That tells you the lengths these lying bastards will go to to protect their tin god, but its always a laugh when they slip up. Trolls, the lot of them. "This is PHYSICS, not math or logic, and "proof" is completely irrelevant." -- Humpty Roberts. "Greg" <ash_5@gravitywell.org > wrote in message news:2z9Ei.8119$ZA.4233@newsb.telia.net... : Yes I think top-posting is the way to go these days, a normal PC screen : holds alot more text than in the old days, and people reply to specific : topics so the people already know what it's all about, and if I reply : to a specific question I'll quote that one ,so kill me :) : : Actually (not complaining - just noting for those who don't know) you : can also receive single meteors entering the atmosphere, : not only meteor shower. : Tuning the SSB radio to a tv carrier far far away will give you a 'ping' : every time a meteor hits between you and the station, the farther away : the more pings you get. : : http://www.gravitywell.org/misc/misc.htm : to show you what it sounds like (no I'm not a webdesigner either :) : : To the best of my knowledge the station I'm tuned in on is in the baltic, : and I live in Sweden, so across the entire baltic sea I get to hear alot of : pings... I also have a feeling they'll continue using analogue tv for a while. : : >> This happens with television too. VHF signals can reflect : >> off other things too, like auroras and patches of intense : >> ionization in the E layer ("E Layer Skip"). Sporadic E : >> signals can be extremely strong. : > : > ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last : > VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already : > have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. : > Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few : > years. : > : > And UHF signals don't reflect as well off sporadic E layes. : > : > -- : > ---------------------------------------------------------------- : > Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN : > e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se : > WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/ : : //Greger : Project Argus station JO89sn : Bålsta - SWEDEN : :
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 09:40:11
From: Per Erik Jorde
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) writes: > ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last > VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already > have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. > Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few > years. More problematically: digital transmissions (TV or radio) have delays in them that makes the time signal unreliable. Where to get reliable time signals for time-critical observations (astrometry, occultation timings, etc.) from now on? pej -- Per Erik Jorde
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 19:29:17
From: Andrew Smallshaw
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On 2007-09-05, Per Erik Jorde <perik@pulsar.imr.no > wrote: > pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) writes: > >> ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last >> VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already >> have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. >> Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few >> years. > > More problematically: digital transmissions (TV or radio) have delays in > them that makes the time signal unreliable. Where to get reliable > time signals for time-critical observations (astrometry, occultation > timings, etc.) from now on? There are a number of methods. The speaking clock is usually pretty good. You appear to be in Norway, and while I'm not about it there, it's good to within 5 ms from a landline here in the UK. That's basically as accurate you're going to get unless you're timing things automatically in some manner. GPS will give you a precision time signal the world over. Finally, in Norway you should be able to get decent ground-wave reception of the MSF time/frequency signal broadcast from here in the UK. Probably the German equivalent to, whose name I forget right now. They can be obtained from fairly cheap radio-controlled clocks. If you need better time accuracy than simply observing the correct time yourself, it's relatively easy to decode these signals automatically and connect that to whatever is recording events. -- Andrew Smallshaw andrews@sdf.lonestar.org
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 07:45:34
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 09:40:11 +0200, Per Erik Jorde <perik@pulsar.imr.no > wrote: >More problematically: digital transmissions (TV or radio) have delays in >them that makes the time signal unreliable. Where to get reliable >time signals for time-critical observations (astrometry, occultation >timings, etc.) from now on? If you need to make time critical observations, you should be using GPS. It's much more accurate than any of the radio time standards, and has a much more widely accessible signal. GPS time receivers have become fairly common and inexpensive (still a little more than a cheap radio receiver, but not much). _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 14:58:09
From: David Knisely
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Chris L. Peterson wrote: > If you need to make time critical observations, you should be using GPS. > It's much more accurate than any of the radio time standards, and has a > much more widely accessible signal. GPS time receivers have become > fairly common and inexpensive (still a little more than a cheap radio > receiver, but not much). I don't know about being much more accurate than *any* of the radio time standards. WWV comes directly without any time delay, so it should be quite accurate. Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely KA0CZC@navix.net Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 14th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 15th-20th, 2007, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * **********************************************
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 21:12:57
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <d0e52$46df0a4f$62109a90$10960@ALLTEL.NET >, David Knisely <KA0CZC@navix.net > wrote: > Chris L. Peterson wrote: > >> If you need to make time critical observations, you should be using GPS. >> It's much more accurate than any of the radio time standards, and has a >> much more widely accessible signal. GPS time receivers have become >> fairly common and inexpensive (still a little more than a cheap radio >> receiver, but not much). > > I don't know about being much more accurate than *any* of the radio > time standards. WWV comes directly without any time delay, so it should > be quite accurate. Clear skies to you. > -- > David W. Knisely KA0CZC@navix.net > Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org > Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ A radio wave travels some 300 meters (1000 feet) in one microsecond. So if you're closer than 300 meter to the nearest WWV transmitter, you might be able to talk about "no delay". Most people have hundreds of kilometers (or more) to the nearest WWV transmitter - which means the radio wave propagation will cause a delay of hundreds of microseconds. The radio waves from the GPS satellites will of course also need time to propagate. But the GPS receiver will know the precise distance to each satellite (otherwise it would be unable to figure out its precise position), and is therefore able to compensate for this delay, giving you a more precise time to an accuracy of one microsecond or so. That's why GPS time is more accurate than any of the radio time signals. Of course if you only need a modest time accuracy of some 100 milliseconds, then you can accept the delay from radio wave propagation over 10,000 or 20,000 km without any problem. And 20,000 km, that's halfway around the globe. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 14:23:39
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 14:58:09 -0500, David Knisely <KA0CZC@navix.net > wrote: >I don't know about being much more accurate than *any* of the radio >time standards. WWV comes directly without any time delay, so it should >be quite accurate. Clear skies to you. WWV is generally accurate to the tens of millisecond range. To use it well, you need to compensate for your distance from the transmitter as well as for various atmospheric conditions. GPS can be accurate to the nanosecond range, with inexpensive GPS receivers normally guaranteeing their time output to better than one microsecond. GPS is definitely the way to go for critical timing applications (such as timestamping individual video frames). _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 21:12:57
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <do3ud39m5s25ahlob66m23s1ibhrhbbi8n@4ax.com >, Chris L Peterson <clp@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: >On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 14:58:09 -0500, David Knisely <KA0CZC@navix.net> >wrote: > >>I don't know about being much more accurate than *any* of the radio >>time standards. WWV comes directly without any time delay, so it should >>be quite accurate. Clear skies to you. > >WWV is generally accurate to the tens of millisecond range. To use it >well, you need to compensate for your distance from the transmitter as >well as for various atmospheric conditions. > >GPS can be accurate to the nanosecond range, with inexpensive GPS >receivers normally guaranteeing their time output to better than one >microsecond. > >GPS is definitely the way to go for critical timing applications (such >as timestamping individual video frames). Unless you have an extremely high video frame rate, the 10 ms accuracy of WWV ought to be sufficient. At 30 frames/s there is some 33 ms between each frame, and at 25 frames/s there is 40 ms between each frame. No need for nanosecond accuracy here! >_________________________________________________ > >Chris L Peterson >Cloudbait Observatory >http://www.cloudbait.com -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 15:36:06
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 21:12:57 GMT, pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >Unless you have an extremely high video frame rate, the 10 ms accuracy >of WWV ought to be sufficient. At 30 frames/s there is some 33 ms >between each frame, and at 25 frames/s there is 40 ms between each >frame. No need for nanosecond accuracy here! With the ordinary video cameras used in my allsky network, a subframe exposure (derived from a deinterlaced frame) is 16 ms. By interpolating brightness, I can usually estimate the event start time to about 4 ms. To eliminate any timing error, I therefore require my timestamp accuracy to be about 2 ms, and I need that accuracy to be fixed (and my times synchronized) across multiple stations separated by hundreds of kilometers. What is actually recorded is the individual frame start and stop times to an accuracy of 1 ms. I don't need the full microsecond accuracy of my GPS clocks, but I need much better than I can easily get with a radio standard. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 15:42:51
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <bjctd3hdrmg3dmafhv6ur3ns18kvnivt2t@4ax.com >, Chris L Peterson <clp@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: >On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 09:40:11 +0200, Per Erik Jorde <perik@pulsar.imr.no> >wrote: > >>More problematically: digital transmissions (TV or radio) have delays in >>them that makes the time signal unreliable. Where to get reliable >>time signals for time-critical observations (astrometry, occultation >>timings, etc.) from now on? > >If you need to make time critical observations, you should be using GPS. >It's much more accurate than any of the radio time standards, and has a >much more widely accessible signal. GPS time receivers have become >fairly common and inexpensive (still a little more than a cheap radio >receiver, but not much). Can you give some examples of available and not that expensive GPS time receivers? >_________________________________________________ > >Chris L Peterson >Cloudbait Observatory >http://www.cloudbait.com -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 09:57:34
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Wed, 05 Sep 2007 15:42:51 GMT, pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >Can you give some examples of available and not that expensive >GPS time receivers? I regularly see used GPS time bases (crystal oscillators with GPS training) on sites that sell surplus equipment. Common prices are on the order of US$200. For my work, I use Garmin GPS18 modules, which run about $US80. But there are a number of modular GPS units with 1pps outputs in that price range. To make use of the output, you can use a number of free or cheap computer programs, use the 1pps signal directly on an audio track, or use an OSD generator for video. A Kiwi OSD, for example, is just US$165. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 09:12:26
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <m3ps0xh86c.fsf@pulsar.imr.no >, Per Erik Jorde <perik@pulsar.imr.no > wrote: >pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) writes: > >> ...except that VHF television is vanishing. In Sweden, the very last >> VHF TV transmitters will close down this fall - most of them already >> have closed down. After that, we only have digital UHF television. >> Other European countries are expected to do the same within a few >> years. > >More problematically: digital transmissions (TV or radio) have delays in >them that makes the time signal unreliable. Where to get reliable >time signals for time-critical observations (astrometry, occultation >timings, etc.) from now on? > >pej >-- >Per Erik Jorde That was a change of subject, but OK..... We still have shortwave radio time signals. Here in Europe, Moscow transmits more or less continuously at 4996, 9996 and 14996 kHz - at least one of these frequencies can be heard any time of the day or night. This requires a shortwave receiver capable of reveicing CW or SSB though. And then you can get a radio controlled clock, which here in Europe is controlled by the transmitter in Mainflingeln, Germany, which transmits at (I believe) 77.5 kHz, i.e. in the LF band. I've checked a few radio controlled clocks against time signals, and they agree "exactly" as far as my eye and ear could determine (which means any discrepancy is less than approx. 0.1 seconds). Finally, if you want to be really "hi-tech", there are always the GPS satellites, which transmit time information to a very high accuracy. The typical GPS receiver units are pretty bad at displaying this time info at the right time though - there's a typical delay of some 1 to 2 seconds in the displayed time. There are probably other GPS receivers which makes the GPS time available to a much higher accuracy, but these units probably cost much more. The CW/SSB shortwave radio receiver or the radio conrolle clock will be much cheaper. Personally I've never used TV transmissions as a time source with high accuracy - I've always used radio controlled clocks, or shortwave time signals. People in North America can use shortwave time signals from WWV in the US, or CHU in Canada. These transmitters use AM, not CW, for their transmissions. The advantage for the user is that any shortwave receiver can be used for these transmissions -- CW/SSB capability of the receiver os not needed. The disadvantage for the user is that AM transmissions don't reach quite as far as CW transmissions - if the received signal is weak, a CW signal will "go through" more clearly. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 05 Sep 2007 14:05:00
From: Per Erik Jorde
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) writes: > That was a change of subject, but OK..... [snip] Paul, many thanks for your detailed information. pej -- Per Erik Jorde
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Date:
From: Martin Brown
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Date: 04 Sep 2007 18:54:43
From: Sjouke Burry
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Martin Brown wrote: >> What would the pulsars sound like in this experiment? Square-waves? > > No. They are sharp narrow pulses roughly 1:100 to 1:1000 mark space > ratio with a broad spectrum of harmonics (a square wave would be 1:1). > You can listen to some pulsar waveforms online at Jodrell Bank: > > http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~pulsar/Education/Sounds/sounds.html > > Regards, > Martin Brown > Impressive sounds!! Thanks.
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Date: 04 Sep 2007 11:42:41
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188895546.425878.63040@y42g2000hsy.googlegroups.com >, Martin Brown <
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Date: 03 Sep 2007 20:14:00
From: Radium
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 3, 1:08 am, Martin Brown <
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Date:
From: Martin Brown
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Date: 03 Sep 2007 00:11:53
From: Radium
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 2, 11:42 pm, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > In article <1188764496.354935.257...@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Is this done using audio software such as Adobe Audition? > > Quotes fromhttp://www.adobe.com/products/audition/overview2.html: > > "Time and pitch processing: Change tempo without shifting pitch - or > > shift pitch without changing tempo - and never introduce audio > > artifacts." > Obviously one can use Audio Audition for that. It could even be done > several decades ago, using analogue techniques. What analogue methods were used for this pitch-shifting? Were they as efficient as audio softwares? > > White noise. Hissing. Nothing special. > Most signals received by radio telescopes will "sound" pretty much > the same. Okay. > Btw, did you know that you can use an FM radio to observe meteor > showers? I didn't know that. > CHoose a radio station which normally is a little bit too > far away to hear, then direct your antenna towards it. Next, wait for > the meteors - and listen to your radio station briefly as its radio > waves are reflected against the meteor trail.... Does the meteor shower make a buzzing sound on FM radio stations?
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 13:21:36
From: Radium
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 2, 2:42 am, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > In article <1188683416.066878.250...@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote: > > The radio-frequency EM radiation emitted from the sun does translate > > to sound when it is picked up by a radio receiver of the same carrier > > frequency. > Here you make the silent assumption that the electric signal from the > radio receiver is fed to a loudspekarer. But that's just *one* > possible way of converting the EM radiation. You could use other ways > too. For instance displaying it on some video screen - those who do > so could claim that "The radio-frequency EM radiation emitted from the > sun does translate to light when it is picked up by a radio receiver > of the same carrier frequency" (with the silent assupmtion that the > output from the receiver is displayed on a video screen). It's the > translator who decides what the EM radiation translates to.... > Btw did you ever try to *listen* to a TV transmission? I mean, to feed > the *video* signal (not the audio signal) to a loudspeaker instead > of a video screen? Yep, the sound changes with the contents of the > picture - but of course one hears only the lowermost part of the 5 MHz > of bandwidth a normal video signal has. I've done this before. Plugged the video signal into the audio receiver. There is some buzzing sound. As you said, that sound changes as video signal changes. > Another interesting experience is to feed a digital signal directly to > a loudspeaker instead of decoding and converting it to an analog > signal first. That of course requires that the digital signal is > within the audible range of frequencies -- the signal from a > traditional telephone modem would be quite suitable here. The old 300 > bps modems produced a signal with a quite clear structure (the signal > jumped between two frequencies 300 times per second), but the more > modern telephone modems which can handle bit rates up to 57600 bps, > they sound pretty much like white noise to the human ear. Interesting indeed. However, are those old modems really "digital"? > > That's why audio software is often used to speed up the infrasound > > until it is at least 20 Hz so that humans can hear it. > :-) ....there's no need to speed it up just to convert the frequency > into the audible range.... the frequency can be bumped up even if > the original speed is maintained. Is this done using audio software such as Adobe Audition? Quotes from http://www.adobe.com/products/audition/overview2.html : "Time and pitch processing: Change tempo without shifting pitch - or shift pitch without changing tempo - and never introduce audio artifacts." > > using an AM receiver as opposed to an FM receiver. FM is immune to the > > disruptions that normally affect AM. > Did you ever try to tune an FM receiver between radio stations on the > FM band? Also turn off any "muting" or "squelch" the receiver may have. > What do you hear? Silence? Or perhaps noise? White noise. Hissing. Nothing special.
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Date: 03 Sep 2007 06:42:41
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188764496.354935.257560@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, Radium <glucegen1@gmail.com > wrote: > On Sep 2, 2:42 am, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: ............... >> Another interesting experience is to feed a digital signal directly to >> a loudspeaker instead of decoding and converting it to an analog >> signal first. That of course requires that the digital signal is >> within the audible range of frequencies -- the signal from a >> traditional telephone modem would be quite suitable here. The old 300 >> bps modems produced a signal with a quite clear structure (the signal >> jumped between two frequencies 300 times per second), but the more >> modern telephone modems which can handle bit rates up to 57600 bps, >> they sound pretty much like white noise to the human ear. > > Interesting indeed. However, are those old modems really "digital"? On one side only ..... the signal sent out on the phone line is of course analog. So what one listens at is a digital signal modulating one or several analog carriers. And this applies not only to old modems but to new modems as well. E.g. ADSL modems work pretty much the same way, except that an ADSL modem has severam MHz of analogue bandwidth available, compared to the 3 kHz of bandwidth an old telephone modem has available. > >>> That's why audio software is often used to speed up the infrasound >>> until it is at least 20 Hz so that humans can hear it. > >> :-) ....there's no need to speed it up just to convert the frequency >> into the audible range.... the frequency can be bumped up even if >> the original speed is maintained. > > Is this done using audio software such as Adobe Audition? > > Quotes from http://www.adobe.com/products/audition/overview2.html : > > "Time and pitch processing: Change tempo without shifting pitch - or > shift pitch without changing tempo - and never introduce audio > artifacts." Obviously one can use Audio Audition for that. It could even be done several decades ago, using analogue techniques. Another possible way would be to let the low frequency signal amplitude modulate a carrier with an audible freqneucy, and then filter away the carrier as well as the lower side band. This will have the effect of adding a fixed frequency (the carrier frequency) to all frequencies in the low frequency signal. Ham radio operators using SSB will know exactly what I'm talking about. >>> using an AM receiver as opposed to an FM receiver. FM is immune to the >>> disruptions that normally affect AM. > >> Did you ever try to tune an FM receiver between radio stations on the >> FM band? Also turn off any "muting" or "squelch" the receiver may have. >> What do you hear? Silence? Or perhaps noise? > > White noise. Hissing. Nothing special. Most signals received by radio telescopes will "sound" pretty much the same. Btw, did you know that you can use an FM radio to observe meteor showers? CHoose a radio station which normally is a little bit too far away to hear, then direct your antenna towards it. Next, wait for the meteors - and listen to your radio station briefly as its radio waves are reflected against the meteor trail.... -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 15:37:04
From: BradGuth
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 31, 6:44 am, Chris L Peterson <c...@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: > On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 12:13:05 GMT, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > >That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly > >above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... > > No, it's _more_ logical. It's having arbitrary names for various regions > of the EM spectrum that isn't entirely logical. > > _________________________________________________ > > Chris L Peterson > Cloudbait Observatoryhttp://www.cloudbait.com Most all ET signals are processed by some kind of technology, so that we can then see or hear the information contained within that signal. If the signal information is encrypted or otherwise weird, then seeing the signal is usually the better alternative. I believe 0.1 TeraHertz of 3 mm is more than good enough, as being roughly 10 fold higher in frequency than any X Band radar imaging efforts sent from Earth would ever manage to contribute all that much due to our terrestrial atmosphere and magnetosphere that'll convert and/or divert much of that outgoing and incoming X Band energy. However, a blue/violet laser cannon would likely become by far the most energy efficient and focused alternative for outgoing as well as incoming signals, especially if those efforts were getting off-world managed, such as within the nearby turf of our moon's L1 could easily accommodate. At least in that way an amateur terrestrial or ET astronomer could rather easily detect such without special instruments. There's all kinds of nifty ways for us to hear and/or see what our moon has to say. It's sodium populated atmosphere along with the surface likes of radon are worth a good deal of science about solar wind and cosmic interactions, as well as for the graviton/tidal issues associated with having to orbit Earth as well as the sun that should be responsible for keeping the low density core of our moon a little extra toasty, as a renewable geothermal cache of energy that could essentially accommodate a fairly extensive underground protected human use of our moon. - Brad Guth
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 19:55:14
From: Bob Downonit
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On 2007-09-02 11:37:04 -0400, BradGuth <bradguth@gmail.com > said: > On Aug 31, 6:44 am, Chris L Peterson <c...@alumni.caltech.edu> wrote: >> On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 12:13:05 GMT, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >>> That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly >>> above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... >> >> No, it's _more_ logical. It's having arbitrary names for various regions >> of the EM spectrum that isn't entirely logical. >> >> _________________________________________________ >> >> Chris L Peterson >> Cloudbait Observatoryhttp://www.cloudbait.com > > Most all ET signals are processed by some kind of technology, so that > we can then see or hear the information contained within that signal. > If the signal information is encrypted or otherwise weird, then seeing > the signal is usually the better alternative. > > I believe 0.1 TeraHertz of 3 mm is more than good enough, as being > roughly 10 fold higher in frequency than any X Band radar imaging > efforts sent from Earth would ever manage to contribute all that much > due to our terrestrial atmosphere and magnetosphere that'll convert > and/or divert much of that outgoing and incoming X Band energy. > > However, a blue/violet laser cannon would likely become by far the > most energy efficient and focused alternative for outgoing as well as > incoming signals, especially if those efforts were getting off-world > managed, such as within the nearby turf of our moon's L1 could easily > accommodate. At least in that way an amateur terrestrial or ET > astronomer could rather easily detect such without special > instruments. > > There's all kinds of nifty ways for us to hear and/or see what our > moon has to say. It's sodium populated atmosphere along with the > surface likes of radon are worth a good deal of science about solar > wind and cosmic interactions, as well as for the graviton/tidal issues > associated with having to orbit Earth as well as the sun that should > be responsible for keeping the low density core of our moon a little > extra toasty, as a renewable geothermal cache of energy that could > essentially accommodate a fairly extensive underground protected human > use of our moon. > - Brad Guth You're a fucktard.
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 20:03:09
From: Art Deco
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Bob Downonit <Down@gag.net > wrote: >On 2007-09-02 11:37:04 -0400, BradGuth <bradguth@gmail.com> said: > >> On Aug 31, 6:44 am, Chris L Peterson <c...@alumni.caltech.edu> wrote: >>> On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 12:13:05 GMT, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >>>> That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly >>>> above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... >>> >>> No, it's _more_ logical. It's having arbitrary names for various regions >>> of the EM spectrum that isn't entirely logical. >>> >>> _________________________________________________ >>> >>> Chris L Peterson >>> Cloudbait Observatoryhttp://www.cloudbait.com >> >> Most all ET signals are processed by some kind of technology, so that >> we can then see or hear the information contained within that signal. >> If the signal information is encrypted or otherwise weird, then seeing >> the signal is usually the better alternative. >> >> I believe 0.1 TeraHertz of 3 mm is more than good enough, as being >> roughly 10 fold higher in frequency than any X Band radar imaging >> efforts sent from Earth would ever manage to contribute all that much >> due to our terrestrial atmosphere and magnetosphere that'll convert >> and/or divert much of that outgoing and incoming X Band energy. >> >> However, a blue/violet laser cannon would likely become by far the >> most energy efficient and focused alternative for outgoing as well as >> incoming signals, especially if those efforts were getting off-world >> managed, such as within the nearby turf of our moon's L1 could easily >> accommodate. At least in that way an amateur terrestrial or ET >> astronomer could rather easily detect such without special >> instruments. >> >> There's all kinds of nifty ways for us to hear and/or see what our >> moon has to say. It's sodium populated atmosphere along with the >> surface likes of radon are worth a good deal of science about solar >> wind and cosmic interactions, as well as for the graviton/tidal issues >> associated with having to orbit Earth as well as the sun that should >> be responsible for keeping the low density core of our moon a little >> extra toasty, as a renewable geothermal cache of energy that could >> essentially accommodate a fairly extensive underground protected human >> use of our moon. >> - Brad Guth > > >You're a fucktard. IAWTP. <http://www.caballista.org/auk/kookle.php?search=guth > -- Official Overseer of Kooks and Saucerheads for alt.astronomy Wee Davie Tholen is a grade-school lamer Trainer and leash holder of: Honest "Clockbrain" John nightbat "fro0tbat" of alt.astronomy Tom "TommY Crackpotter" Potter <http://www.caballista.org/auk/kookle.php?search=deco > "You really are one of the litsiest people I know, Mr. Deco." --Kali, quoted endlessly by David Tholen as evidence of "something" "Why are you now discussing Art Deco, rec.music.classical, the coward using a fake name who avoids answering questions and doesn't try to discuss music with anyone?" --David Tholen "Quite a kook-out, Deco. You've been frothing even more ever since I demonstrated how you believe that ah's family name is "ah"." --David Tholen
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Date: 03 Sep 2007 19:46:26
From: Bob Downonit
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On 2007-09-02 22:03:09 -0400, Art Deco <erfc@caballista.org > said: > IAWTP. > > <http://www.caballista.org/auk/kookle.php?search=guth> LOL!
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 14:57:22
From: Art Deco
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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BradGuth <bradguth@gmail.com > wrote: >I believe No one cares, Brad. -- Official Overseer of Kooks and Saucerheads for alt.astronomy Wee Davie Tholen is a grade-school lamer Trainer and leash holder of: Honest "Clockbrain" John nightbat "fro0tbat" of alt.astronomy Tom "TommY Crackpotter" Potter <http://www.caballista.org/auk/kookle.php?search=deco > "You really are one of the litsiest people I know, Mr. Deco." --Kali, quoted endlessly by David Tholen as evidence of "something" "Why are you now discussing Art Deco, rec.music.classical, the coward using a fake name who avoids answering questions and doesn't try to discuss music with anyone?" --David Tholen "Quite a kook-out, Deco. You've been frothing even more ever since I demonstrated how you believe that ah's family name is "ah"." --David Tholen
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Date: 01 Sep 2007 14:50:16
From: Radium
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Sep 1, 1:12 am, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > In article <1188620214.390706.118...@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Sorry, I meant to ask whether 3,438 GHz is the highest radio frequency > > used to receive audio signals from outer space. I should have made my > > question more specific. Radio-astronomers study sounds from the sun as > > well as visual data. > Radio astronomers study EM radiation, not "sounds", from the Sun. > Since there's a vacuum between the Sun and us, no sound waves would be > able to propagate from the Sun to us. The radio-frequency EM radiation emitted from the sun does translate to sound when it is picked up by a radio receiver of the same carrier frequency. > Otoh careeful studies of > Doppler shifts have enabled solar astronomers to study sound waves > *within* the Sun. But these sound waves never reach us - we can only > study them indirectly because they move matter near the solar surface. > And their frequencies are usually well below what the human ear can > hear, i.e. it's infrasound. That's why audio software is often used to speed up the infrasound until it is at least 20 Hz so that humans can hear it. > > I wonder if a space station with a 3,438 GHz AM receiver could pick up > > any extremely-distant audio signals between 20 to 20,000 Hz [from > > magnetars, gamma-ray-bursts, supernovae and other high-energy but > > cosmic objects] after demodulating the 3,438 GHz AM carrier wave. > They could certainly try .... but if they did, and succeeded, it would > sound just like noise. This radiation does not originate as audio > signals, and they're certainly not put on an AM modulated carrier. Well, most natural sources of EMI and RFI are amplitude-modulated. The audio signals are not put on the carrier wave, however if the variations in the peak-to-peak amplitude of the 3,438 GHz electromagnetic waves correspond to frequencies between 20 and 20,000 Hz [and the peak-to-peak variations are sufficient in power], then the signal can be picked up of 3,438 GHz receiver and demodulated. The result would be audio signals. > Therefore it's hardly useful to try to demodulate these waves as if > they were AM modulated signals - there's e.g. no AM carrier (i.e. one > single frequency which is stronger than all the others within the > frequency band). > Also, any audio (= pressure waves within a gas) which are formed > outside the Earth is certainly *not* limited to the 20 to 20,000 > Hz frequency range..... that frequency range is merely the limits > of what the human ear can hear. Audio waves from 20 to 20,000 Hz can be derived from demodulating radio waves. Since most natural radio disruptions are amplitude- modulated it would be easier to listen to cosmic sounds using an AM receiver as opposed to an FM receiver. FM is immune to the disruptions that normally affect AM. In AM demodulation: 1. The amplitude of the demodulated signal [what we hear] is determined by the depth-of-change of the peak-to-peak amplitude of the radio wave. If the peak-to-peak amplitude of the radio wave is above the central amplitude** then the demodulated signal will have a positive voltage. If the peak-to-peak amplitude of the radio wave is below the central amplitude then the demodulated signal will have a negative voltage. If these changes in voltages are between 20 and 20,000 Hz*, then they will be audible if the over voltage is high- enough and this signal is fed into a loudspeaker 2. The frequency of the demodulated signal is determined by the rate- of-change of the peak-to-peak amplitude of the radio wave *In an electric signal, a cycle is when a voltage changes from zero to positive to zero to negative and then back to zero. In USA, the power supply is 60 Hz [cycles per second] while being 50 Hz in Europe. In order to produce audible sound when fed to a loudspeaker, the peak-to- peak voltage must be high-enough to reach the threshold of hearing or above and must be at least 20 Hz but no more than 20,000 Hz. A loudspeaker produces the mechanical equivalent of the electric signal it receives. ** Central amplitude = amplitude of the radio wave when there is no modulation signal.
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 09:42:19
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188683416.066878.250530@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, Radium <glucegen1@gmail.com > wrote: > On Sep 1, 1:12 am, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > >> In article <1188620214.390706.118...@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > >> Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> Sorry, I meant to ask whether 3,438 GHz is the highest radio frequency >>> used to receive audio signals from outer space. I should have made my >>> question more specific. Radio-astronomers study sounds from the sun as >>> well as visual data. > >> Radio astronomers study EM radiation, not "sounds", from the Sun. >> Since there's a vacuum between the Sun and us, no sound waves would be >> able to propagate from the Sun to us. > > The radio-frequency EM radiation emitted from the sun does translate > to sound when it is picked up by a radio receiver of the same carrier > frequency. Here you make the silent assumption that the electric signal from the radio receiver is fed to a loudspekarer. But that's just *one* possible way of converting the EM radiation. You could use other ways too. For instance displaying it on some video screen - those who do so could claim that "The radio-frequency EM radiation emitted from the sun does translate to light when it is picked up by a radio receiver of the same carrier frequency" (with the silent assupmtion that the output from the receiver is displayed on a video screen). It's the translator who decides what the EM radiation translates to.... Btw did you ever try to *listen* to a TV transmission? I mean, to feed the *video* signal (not the audio signal) to a loudspeaker instead of a video screen? Yep, the sound changes with the contents of the picture - but of course one hears only the lowermost part of the 5 MHz of bandwidth a normal video signal has. Another interesting experience is to feed a digital signal directly to a loudspeaker instead of decoding and converting it to an analog signal first. That of course requires that the digital signal is within the audible range of frequencies -- the signal from a traditional telephone modem would be quite suitable here. The old 300 bps modems produced a signal with a quite clear structure (the signal jumped between two frequencies 300 times per second), but the more modern telephone modems which can handle bit rates up to 57600 bps, they sound pretty much like white noise to the human ear. >> Otoh careeful studies of >> Doppler shifts have enabled solar astronomers to study sound waves >> *within* the Sun. But these sound waves never reach us - we can only >> study them indirectly because they move matter near the solar surface. >> And their frequencies are usually well below what the human ear can >> hear, i.e. it's infrasound. > > That's why audio software is often used to speed up the infrasound > until it is at least 20 Hz so that humans can hear it. :-) ....there's no need to speed it up just to convert the frequency into the audible range.... the frequency can be bumped up even if the original speed is maintained. >>> I wonder if a space station with a 3,438 GHz AM receiver could pick up >>> any extremely-distant audio signals between 20 to 20,000 Hz [from >>> magnetars, gamma-ray-bursts, supernovae and other high-energy but >>> cosmic objects] after demodulating the 3,438 GHz AM carrier wave. > >> They could certainly try .... but if they did, and succeeded, it would >> sound just like noise. This radiation does not originate as audio >> signals, and they're certainly not put on an AM modulated carrier. > > Well, most natural sources of EMI and RFI are amplitude-modulated. They're probably frequency modulated and phase modulated as well, since their contents are pretty random. I strongly doubt they consist of one single frequency whose amplitude varies while its frequency and phase remains unchanged (that's the way a properly modulated AM signal would be). In particular it won't have symmetrical sidebands with the same content, the way a real AM signal should have. > The audio signals are not put on the carrier wave, however if the > variations in the peak-to-peak amplitude of the 3,438 GHz > electromagnetic waves correspond to frequencies between 20 and 20,000 > Hz [and the peak-to-peak variations are sufficient in power], then the > signal can be picked up of 3,438 GHz receiver and demodulated. The > result would be audio signals. Trivially true -- but these audio signals would be created by us humans. They're not inherent in the original signal. >> Therefore it's hardly useful to try to demodulate these waves as if >> they were AM modulated signals - there's e.g. no AM carrier (i.e. one >> single frequency which is stronger than all the others within the >> frequency band). > >> Also, any audio (= pressure waves within a gas) which are formed >> outside the Earth is certainly *not* limited to the 20 to 20,000 >> Hz frequency range..... that frequency range is merely the limits >> of what the human ear can hear. > > Audio waves from 20 to 20,000 Hz can be derived from demodulating > radio waves. You can create audio waves also below 20 Hz and above 20,000 Hz as well. Humans won't hear them, true, but dogs and bats might enjoy them... :-) > Since most natural radio disruptions are amplitude- > modulated it would be easier to listen to cosmic sounds These sounds aren't "cosmic" - they're created here on Earth by us humans. > using an AM receiver as opposed to an FM receiver. FM is immune to the > disruptions that normally affect AM. Did you ever try to tune an FM receiver between radio stations on the FM band? Also turn off any "muting" or "squelch" the receiver may have. What do you hear? Silence? Or perhaps noise? You say "FM is immune to the disruptions that normally affect AM". If this is to work, you must have an FM carrier which is strong enough for the receivers amplitude limitation circuits to work well. Cosmic radio noise is far too weak for that. <description of AM and definition of frequency snipped > -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 01 Sep 2007 04:16:54
From: Radium
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 30, 4:33 am, gwatts <gwa...@frontiernet.net > wrote: > Radium wrote: > > Hi: > > > What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > > According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: > > >http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 > > > Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > If you read on a little farther you'll find > 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared astronomy.' > > So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and > infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. Sorry, I meant to ask whether 3,438 GHz is the highest radio frequency used to receive audio signals from outer space. I should have made my question more specific. Radio-astronomers study sounds from the sun as well as visual data. I wonder if a space station with a 3,438 GHz AM receiver could pick up any extremely-distant audio signals between 20 to 20,000 Hz [from magnetars, gamma-ray-bursts, supernovae and other high-energy but cosmic objects] after demodulating the 3,438 GHz AM carrier wave.
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Date: 01 Sep 2007 08:12:11
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188620214.390706.118800@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, Radium <glucegen1@gmail.com > wrote: > Sorry, I meant to ask whether 3,438 GHz is the highest radio frequency > used to receive audio signals from outer space. I should have made my > question more specific. Radio-astronomers study sounds from the sun as > well as visual data. Radio astronomers study EM radiation, not "sounds", from the Sun. Since there's a vacuum between the Sun and us, no sound waves would be able to propagate from the Sun to us. Otoh careeful studies of Doppler shifts have enabled solar astronomers to study sound waves *within* the Sun. But these sound waves never reach us - we can only study them indirectly because they move matter near the solar surface. And their frequencies are usually well below what the human ear can hear, i.e. it's infrasound. > I wonder if a space station with a 3,438 GHz AM receiver could pick up > any extremely-distant audio signals between 20 to 20,000 Hz [from > magnetars, gamma-ray-bursts, supernovae and other high-energy but > cosmic objects] after demodulating the 3,438 GHz AM carrier wave. They could certainly try .... but if they did, and succeeded, it would sound just like noise. This radiation does not originate as audio signals, and they're certainly not put on an AM modulated carrier. Therefore it's hardly useful to try to demodulate these waves as if they were AM modulated signals - there's e.g. no AM carrier (i.e. one single frequency which is stronger than all the others within the frequency band). Also, any audio (= pressure waves within a gas) which are formed outside the Earth is certainly *not* limited to the 20 to 20,000 Hz frequency range..... that frequency range is merely the limits of what the human ear can hear. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 08:01:21
From: laura halliday
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 30, 11:42 pm, pau...@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: > In article <1188490924.299814.37...@e9g2000prf.googlegroups.com>, > laura halliday <marsga...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > The usual agreement is that it's radio astronomy when the > > incoming signals are electronically detected (e.g. diodes) and > > processed. It's optical/infrared astronomy when the incoming > > signals are measured by a bolometer or other non-electronic > > means. There is, naturally, some crossover. > > Given today's CCD chips which indeed are electronic devices, does that > mean todays optical telescopes, with CCD chips which detect light > electronically, have become radio telescopes? Can't say I agree with that; CCDs count photons, which makes them a lot closer to bolometers than diodes. The other issue, of course, is just what difference it makes. Astronomers examine the universe to see how it works. They use various wavelengths to do it. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Non sequitur. Your ACKS are Grid: CN89mg uncoordinated." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Nomad the Network Engineer
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 11:02:29
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 08:01:21 -0700, laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com > wrote: >Can't say I agree with that; CCDs count photons, which makes >them a lot closer to bolometers than diodes. That's an interesting observation. In the submillimeter domain we are just entering the (high) range of EM frequencies where our instruments detect quanta. Below that they are wave detectors. I don't think we have any technology that allows us to detect photons in the radio band, for instance. >The other issue, of course, is just what difference it makes. In terms of astronomy, it makes no difference at all. It is interesting in terms of language, however. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 14:26:16
From: BradGuth
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 30, 12:33 am, Radium <gluceg...@gmail.com > wrote: > Hi: > > What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: > > http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 > > Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > Thanks, > > Radium For obtaining eye candy that's entirely outside of our physical reach, and for the most part having been getting further away as we speak, the 3.438 THz might be fine and dandy for accomplishing that spendy look-see which can't possibly benefit humanity or that of our badly failing environment. Much above 0.1 THz is where such photons if transmitted from Earth simply do not reflect unless the target offers a nifty array of parabolic dishes, or of some other artificial reflective surface. Outside of our magnetosphere, such as within our moon's L1, is where X band of 8 ~ 12.5 GHz or possibly as great as Ka Band of 26.5 ~ 40 GHz might become interesting and/or essential if future space travel is to avoid those nasty bits and pieces of debris that'll otherwise clean your clock upon encountering such, with C Band of 4 ~ 8 GHz being a little better off for those slightly larger targets and perhaps best of all S Band of 2 ~ 4 GHz offering a compromise that'll still yield more than sufficient image resolution of a given planet or moon, along with offering a darn good reflective signal to noise ratio. However, if the potential target is the least bit intelligent worthy, as many should be, as such why not use a blue~violet laser cannon, UV- a, or possibly good old X-rays or even gamma ? Though gravity can be directly measured, of what we can't manage thus far is the two-way frequency applications of utilizing said gravitons. Perhaps there again, the mutual gravity nullification zone of our moon's L1 could allow for the limited use of gravitons, and this alternative might become better yet once we've relocated that moon to Earth's L1. - Brad Guth
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 09:22:04
From: laura halliday
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 30, 8:03 am, Margo Schulter <mschul...@web1.calweb.com > wrote: > It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are > distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by > the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. > > Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not > saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, > only mentioning this category as an example of what was > traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. > > Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. The ITU definition of "radio" ends at the top of EHF, at 300 GHz. However, this is more a reflection of the technical state of the art at the time the definition was made. Earlier definitions ended at 30 GHz, or even lower. I've read papers in journals for radio equipment that operates above 400 GHz. You need a microscope to inspect the components. :-) Above 300 GHz is no man's land, in that no radio license is required to send signals. Laser communication links are not licensed as radios; they are not generally licensed at all, unless health & safety officials take an interest in the lasers themselves. The spectrum between EHF and infrared is viewed as not useful for communication, because the atmosphere is more-or-less opaque at these wavelengths. But that's what they said about frequencies about 30 MHz in the 1920s, too. And in space, who cares? The usual agreement is that it's radio astronomy when the incoming signals are electronically detected (e.g. diodes) and processed. It's optical/infrared astronomy when the incoming signals are measured by a bolometer or other non-electronic means. There is, naturally, some crossover. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Non sequitur. Your ACKS are Grid: CN89mg uncoordinated." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Nomad the Network Engineer
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 22:58:26
From: Margo Schulter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In sci.astro.amateur laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com > wrote: > > The ITU definition of "radio" ends at the top of EHF, at 300 GHz. > However, this is more a reflection of the technical state of the > art at the time the definition was made. Earlier definitions ended > at 30 GHz, or even lower. I've read papers in journals for radio > equipment that operates above 400 GHz. You need a microscope > to inspect the components. :-) > > Above 300 GHz is no man's land, in that no radio license is > required to send signals. Laser communication links are > not licensed as radios; they are not generally licensed at all, > unless health & safety officials take an interest in the lasers > themselves. Hi, Laura, and thanks to you and others very helpful responses on this point. A bit of browsing the Web has shown me that definitions can vary, for example with the portion of the submillimeter spectrum around 300 GHz - 1 THz (or 1mm - 300um) being considered as more "radio-like" by some. > The spectrum between EHF and infrared is viewed as not useful > for communication, because the atmosphere is more-or-less > opaque at these wavelengths. But that's what they said about > frequencies about 30 MHz in the 1920s, too. And in space, who > cares? Exactly; and it's interesting some of the special environments which are above most of the atmosphere's water vapor, or dessicated, that are used for terrestrial observations at certain points in the EHF and submilliter spectrum. Most appreciatively, Margo Schulter mschulter@calweb.com Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 06:42:29
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <1188490924.299814.37650@e9g2000prf.googlegroups.com >, laura halliday <marsgal42@hotmail.com > wrote: > The usual agreement is that it's radio astronomy when the > incoming signals are electronically detected (e.g. diodes) and > processed. It's optical/infrared astronomy when the incoming > signals are measured by a bolometer or other non-electronic > means. There is, naturally, some crossover. Given today's CCD chips which indeed are electronic devices, does that mean todays optical telescopes, with CCD chips which detect light electronically, have become radio telescopes? -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 08:50:44
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Aug 30, 10:34 am, "Peter Webb" <webbfam...@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au > wrote: > "Margo Schulter" <mschul...@web1.calweb.com> wrote in message > > news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com... > > > > > > > In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwa...@frontiernet.net> wrote: > > >> Radium wrote: > >>> Hi: > > >>> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > >>> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: > > >>>http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 > > >>> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > >> If you read on a little farther you'll find > >> 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared > >> astronomy.' > > >> So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and > >> infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. > > > Hi, Radium, gwatts, and all. > > > I'd agree that the real question here may be where to draw the line > > between radio and infrared, and thus between radio astronomy and > > infrared astronomy. > > > What I learned about 40 years ago was that while the line wasn't > > a clear one, the shortest or highest-frequency range of radio waves > > traditionally placed in that classification were "millimeter waves" > > with a wavelength of 1-10mm. Given that the speed of light, c, is > > very close to 3 x 10^10 centimeters per second, so that a 1 cm or > > 10mm wave would have a frequency of around 30 Gz, this category > > (also known as Extremely High Frequency or EHF) has a 30-300GHz > > range. > > > A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than > > 100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher > > in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure > > if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous > > to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first > > layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very > > far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close > > to radio). > > > It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are > > distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by > > the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. > > > Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not > > saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, > > only mentioning this category as an example of what was > > traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. > > > Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. > > > Most appreciatively, > > > Margo Schulter > > mschul...@calweb.com > > Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430 > > So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up > from microwaves to IR? Nobody limited the discussion to *terrestrial* astronomy. If one is working from space, the transparency of the atmosphere is irrelevant. Austin
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 05:51:04
From:
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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> So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and > infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. Why don't you just call it all electromagnetic astronomy?
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 12:56:05
From: gwatts
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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zanthius.dxun@gmail.com wrote: >>So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and >>infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. > > > Why don't you just call it all electromagnetic astronomy? It's not my call.
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 11:33:27
From: gwatts
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Radium wrote: > Hi: > > What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: > > http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 > > Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? If you read on a little farther you'll find 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared astronomy.' So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and infrared astronomy? There's you're answer.
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 15:03:23
From: Margo Schulter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net > wrote: > Radium wrote: >> Hi: >> >> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? >> >> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: >> >> http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 >> >> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > > If you read on a little farther you'll find > 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared astronomy.' > > So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and > infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. Hi, Radium, gwatts, and all. I'd agree that the real question here may be where to draw the line between radio and infrared, and thus between radio astronomy and infrared astronomy. What I learned about 40 years ago was that while the line wasn't a clear one, the shortest or highest-frequency range of radio waves traditionally placed in that classification were "millimeter waves" with a wavelength of 1-10mm. Given that the speed of light, c, is very close to 3 x 10^10 centimeters per second, so that a 1 cm or 10mm wave would have a frequency of around 30 Gz, this category (also known as Extremely High Frequency or EHF) has a 30-300GHz range. A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than 100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close to radio). It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, only mentioning this category as an example of what was traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. Most appreciatively, Margo Schulter mschulter@calweb.com Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 10:22:34
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On 30 Aug 2007 15:03:23 GMT, Margo Schulter <mschulter@web1.calweb.com > wrote: >A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than >100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher >in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure >if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous >to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first >layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very >far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close >to radio). They are called submillimeter waves, and represent the transition between what is widely accepted as "radio" and what is widely accepted as "optical". IMO the best way to categorize EM bands is by the nature of the equipment we use to measure energy in those bands. Submillimeter radiation is detected using special receivers which combine optical-like sensors (bolometers) and radio-like sensors (heterodyne receivers and tuned antennas). I think its best to simply consider the range from about one millimeter to 1/10 millimeter as "submillimeter", neither radio nor optical (IR). _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 06:42:29
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <sardd3d4g8vutoetbhl97eo7g1jbhidjd3@4ax.com >, Chris L Peterson <clp@alumni.caltech.edu > wrote: > IMO the best way to categorize EM bands is by the nature of the > equipment we use to measure energy in those bands. Submillimeter > radiation is detected using special receivers which combine optical-like > sensors (bolometers) and radio-like sensors (heterodyne receivers and > tuned antennas). I think its best to simply consider the range from > about one millimeter to 1/10 millimeter as "submillimeter", neither > radio nor optical (IR). Or perhaps we could consider that wavelength band both "optical" and "radio", since radiation at those wavelengths probably can be detected both with radio and with optical equipment. And if one wants to decide on some single wavelength limit between "radio" and "optical", 0.3 millimeter appears to be a good choice since it resides near the middle of this "submillimeter" band. This corresponds to a frequency of one TeraHertz. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 02:27:48
From: Dan Tilque
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Paul Schlyter wrote: > > And if one wants to decide on some single wavelength limit > between "radio" and "optical", 0.3 millimeter appears to be a > good choice since it resides near the middle of this > "submillimeter" band. This corresponds to a frequency of one > TeraHertz. And in fact, e-m radiation at and around that frequency is often called Terahertz radiation, or Terahertz waves, or T-rays, etc. More specifically, from 300 GHz to 3 THz is the Terahertz band. This terminology seems to be used more in non-astronomical fields. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terahertz -- Dan Tilque
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 12:13:05
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <9uWdnfv33_LaQ0rbnZ2dnUVZ_jWdnZ2d@comcast.com >, Dan Tilque <dtilque@comcast.net > wrote: >Paul Schlyter wrote: > >> >> And if one wants to decide on some single wavelength limit >> between "radio" and "optical", 0.3 millimeter appears to be a >> good choice since it resides near the middle of this >> "submillimeter" band. This corresponds to a frequency of one >> TeraHertz. > >And in fact, e-m radiation at and around that frequency is often >called Terahertz radiation, or Terahertz waves, or T-rays, etc. >More specifically, from 300 GHz to 3 THz is the Terahertz band. >This terminology seems to be used more in non-astronomical >fields. > >http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terahertz That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... >-- >Dan Tilque > > -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 07:44:56
From: Chris L Peterson
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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On Fri, 31 Aug 2007 12:13:05 GMT, pausch@saaf.se (Paul Schlyter) wrote: >That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly >above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... No, it's _more_ logical. It's having arbitrary names for various regions of the EM spectrum that isn't entirely logical. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 12:04:02
From: Richard Tobin
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <fb8v7n$13it$1@merope.saaf.se >, Paul Schlyter <pausch@saaf.se > wrote: >That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly >above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... Seems logical to me. Anything above 316kHz is nearer to 1MHz than to 100kHz. -- Richard -- "Consideration shall be given to the need for as many as 32 characters in some alphabets" - X3.4, 1963.
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 13:42:28
From: Paul Schlyter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In article <fb903i$174t$1@pc-news.cogsci.ed.ac.uk >, Richard Tobin <richard@cogsci.ed.ac.uk > wrote: >In article <fb8v7n$13it$1@merope.saaf.se>, >Paul Schlyter <pausch@saaf.se> wrote: > >>That's a little illogical. It's like considering a frequency slightly >>above 300 kHz to belong to "the Megahertz band" .... > >Seems logical to me. Anything above 316kHz is nearer to 1MHz than to >100kHz. There's a difference between "the Megahertz band" and "the One Megahertz band". The former can be interpreted as the band from 1 MHz to 1 GHz for instance, instead of your interpretation from 0.316 to 3.16 MHz.... >-- Richard > >-- >"Consideration shall be given to the need for as many as 32 characters >in some alphabets" - X3.4, 1963. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Paul Schlyter, Grev Turegatan 40, SE-114 38 Stockholm, SWEDEN e-mail: pausch at stockholm dot bostream dot se WWW: http://stjarnhimlen.se/
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Date: 31 Aug 2007 01:34:38
From: Peter Webb
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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"Margo Schulter" <mschulter@web1.calweb.com > wrote in message news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com... > In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net> wrote: > >> Radium wrote: >>> Hi: >>> >>> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? >>> >>> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: >>> >>> http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 >>> >>> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? >> >> If you read on a little farther you'll find >> 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared >> astronomy.' >> >> So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and >> infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. > > Hi, Radium, gwatts, and all. > > I'd agree that the real question here may be where to draw the line > between radio and infrared, and thus between radio astronomy and > infrared astronomy. > > What I learned about 40 years ago was that while the line wasn't > a clear one, the shortest or highest-frequency range of radio waves > traditionally placed in that classification were "millimeter waves" > with a wavelength of 1-10mm. Given that the speed of light, c, is > very close to 3 x 10^10 centimeters per second, so that a 1 cm or > 10mm wave would have a frequency of around 30 Gz, this category > (also known as Extremely High Frequency or EHF) has a 30-300GHz > range. > > A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than > 100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher > in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure > if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous > to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first > layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very > far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close > to radio). > > It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are > distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by > the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. > > Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not > saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, > only mentioning this category as an example of what was > traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. > > Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. > > Most appreciatively, > > Margo Schulter > mschulter@calweb.com > Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430 > So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up from microwaves to IR?
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 23:23:01
From: Profumo
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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--------------F8533ACC1F089F7AA0CF7EC7 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Peter Webb wrote: > "Margo Schulter" <mschulter@web1.calweb.com> wrote in message > news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com... > > In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net> wrote: > > > >> Radium wrote: > >>> Hi: > >>> > >>> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > >>> > >>> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: > >>> > >>> http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 > >>> > >>> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? > >> > >> If you read on a little farther you'll find > >> 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared > >> astronomy.' > >> > >> So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and > >> infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. > > > > Hi, Radium, gwatts, and all. > > > > I'd agree that the real question here may be where to draw the line > > between radio and infrared, and thus between radio astronomy and > > infrared astronomy. > > > > What I learned about 40 years ago was that while the line wasn't > > a clear one, the shortest or highest-frequency range of radio waves > > traditionally placed in that classification were "millimeter waves" > > with a wavelength of 1-10mm. Given that the speed of light, c, is > > very close to 3 x 10^10 centimeters per second, so that a 1 cm or > > 10mm wave would have a frequency of around 30 Gz, this category > > (also known as Extremely High Frequency or EHF) has a 30-300GHz > > range. > > > > A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than > > 100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher > > in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure > > if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous > > to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first > > layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very > > far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close > > to radio). > > > > It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are > > distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by > > the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. > > > > Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not > > saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, > > only mentioning this category as an example of what was > > traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. > > > > Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. > > > > Most appreciatively, > > > > Margo Schulter > > mschulter@calweb.com > > Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430 > > > > So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up > from microwaves to IR? She didnt say anything at all about this. Why are you "contending" contenacity contumaciously? --------------F8533ACC1F089F7AA0CF7EC7 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit <!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en" > <html > <p >Peter Webb wrote: <blockquote TYPE=CITE >"Margo Schulter" <mschulter@web1.calweb.com> wrote in message <br ><a href="news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com">news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com</a>... <br >> In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net> wrote: <br >> <br >>> Radium wrote: <br >>>> Hi: <br >>>> <br >>>> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? <br >>>> <br >>>> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: <br >>>> <br >>>> <a href="http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11">http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11</a> <br >>>> <br >>>> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? <br >>> <br >>> If you read on a little farther you'll find <br >>> 'blurring the distinction between radio astronomy and infrared <br >>> astronomy.' <br >>> <br >>> So where do you want to draw the line between radio astronomy and <br >>> infrared astronomy? There's you're answer. <br >> <br >> Hi, Radium, gwatts, and all. <br >> <br >> I'd agree that the real question here may be where to draw the line <br >> between radio and infrared, and thus between radio astronomy and <br >> infrared astronomy. <br >> <br >> What I learned about 40 years ago was that while the line wasn't <br >> a clear one, the shortest or highest-frequency range of radio waves <br >> traditionally placed in that classification were "millimeter waves" <br >> with a wavelength of 1-10mm. Given that the speed of light, c, is <br >> very close to 3 x 10^10 centimeters per second, so that a 1 cm or <br >> 10mm wave would have a frequency of around 30 Gz, this category <br >> (also known as Extremely High Frequency or EHF) has a 30-300GHz <br >> range. <br >> <br >> A frequency of 3438 GHz, with a wavelength a bit shorter than <br >> 100 microns, would thus be about an order of magnitude higher <br >> in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure <br >> if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous <br >> to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first <br >> layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very <br >> far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close <br >> to radio). <br >> <br >> It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are <br >> distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by <br >> the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. <br >> <br >> Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not <br >> saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, <br >> only mentioning this category as an example of what was <br >> traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. <br >> <br >> Maybe Laura or others could comment more expertly on this. <br >> <br >> Most appreciatively, <br >> <br >> Margo Schulter <br >> mschulter@calweb.com <br >> Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430 <br >> <p >So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up <br >from microwaves to IR?</blockquote> She didnt say anything at all about this. Why are you "contending" <br >contenacity contumaciously? <br > <br > <br > <br > <br > </html> --------------F8533ACC1F089F7AA0CF7EC7--
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 17:03:33
From: George Dishman
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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"Peter Webb" <webbfamily@DIESPAMDIEoptusnet.com.au > wrote in message news:46d6e391$0$6690$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.au... > "Margo Schulter" <mschulter@web1.calweb.com> wrote in message > news:46d6dc3b$0$34291$d368eab@news.calweb.com... >> In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net> wrote: >>> Radium wrote: >>>> Hi: >>>> >>>> What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? >>>> >>>> According to the link below, it is 3438 GHz: >>>> >>>> http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11719&page=11 >>>> >>>> Is 3438 GHz the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy? ... >> in frequency than the top of the EHF range. While I'm not sure >> if there's a specific technical name for this range (analogous >> to the various categories of radio waves like EHF), my first >> layperson's guess would be that it could be considered very >> far infrared (that is, far from the visual spectrum and close >> to radio). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_spectrum 3.4THz would be well into the far infra-red. >> It's interesting question how radio and infrared astronomy are >> distinguished: mainly by the nature of the waves, or also by >> the apparatus used. I'd like to to learn more of this myself. >> >> Again, I'd emphasize that in giving the range for EHF, I'm not >> saying that anything above 300 GHz wouldn't be considered radio, >> only mentioning this category as an example of what was >> traditionally considered near the top of the radio spectrum. ... > So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up > from microwaves to IR? I don't believe Margo suggested that at all. This page lists some of the sources of line features in that region: http://kp12m.as.arizona.edu/docs/what_is_submillimeter.htm George
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Date: 30 Aug 2007 15:55:07
From: gwatts
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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Peter Webb wrote: > ... > > So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up > from microwaves to IR? I didn't see anything referring to atmospheric transparency in Ms. Schulter's response but I'll point you to http://www.alma.nrao.edu/memos/html-memos/alma187/memo187.html or 'MMA Memo 187: Modeling of the Submillimeter Opacity on Chajnantor' specifically figures 1-6 which show opacities through air paths and modeled opacities over Mauna Kea, HI. Farther on the authors discuss predicting opacities over the ALMA site in Chile. What it comes down to is: No, the atmosphere is not 'transparent all the way up from microwaves to IR,' but there are windows of transparency where valuable observations can be made. Something else possibly worth perusing is http://www.cv.nrao.edu/naasc/presentations/ALMA_2007_Handout.pdf and of course the entire ALMA/MMA Memo Series, http://www.alma.info/
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Date: 02 Sep 2007 23:21:51
From: Margo Schulter
Subject: Re: What is the highest radio frequency used for radio astronomy?
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In sci.astro.amateur gwatts <gwatts@frontiernet.net > wrote: > Peter Webb wrote: >> > ... >> >> So its your contention that the atmosphere is transparent all the way up >> from microwaves to IR? > > I didn't see anything referring to atmospheric transparency in Ms. > Schulter's response but I'll point you to > http://www.alma.nrao.edu/memos/html-memos/alma187/memo187.html > or > 'MMA Memo 187: Modeling of the Submillimeter Opacity on Chajnantor' > > specifically figures 1-6 which show opacities through air paths and > modeled opacities over Mauna Kea, HI. Farther on the authors discuss > predicting opacities over the ALMA site in Chile. Hi, Peter, and thank you for your correct conclusion that in my post I really wasn't concerned with transparency or propagation questions, only with the general question of how to describe what I now have learned is often called the submillieter portion of the spectrum. > > What it comes down to is: No, the atmosphere is not 'transparent all > the way up from microwaves to IR,' but there are windows of transparency > where valuable observations can be made. That sounds to me like good summary, which would also fit what I recall from the 1960's about certain regions of EHF -- maybe around 60GHz or so -- where attentuation or extinction from water vapor is especially notable. Maybe this is a bit analogous to the absorption lines of visual spectroscopy. Of course, as Laura has pointed out, in space this kind of attenuation is not really a problem! > Something else possibly worth perusing is > http://www.cv.nrao.edu/naasc/presentations/ALMA_2007_Handout.pdf > > and of course the entire ALMA/MMA Memo Series, > http://www.alma.info/ Thanks for these links, which I'll study. Most appreciatively, Margo Schulter mschulter@calweb.com Lat. 38.566 Long. -121.430
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