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Radiation Storm Lets You Listen Long-Distance

bubblegoose writes: "There is a large radiation storm in progress caused by a solar flare on the backside of the Sun. Here's a story from Spaceweather. It has a pretty cool effect on radio signals. I was picking up a 6000 Watt North Carolina FM station from near Philly." Bubblegoose also brings you this link to dxing.com, a site all about listening in when freak atmospheric conditions create unusual RF propagation patterns.

6 of 134 comments (clear)

  1. For those of us in Atlanta by Sunfist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "I was picking up a 6000 Watt North Carolina FM station from near Philly"

    For those of us in Atlanta, I know I picked up a Cuban station earlier. I don't know how far away this can be heard, because I haven't traveled around checking it out. I'm a little rusty on my Spanish, but it seems to be a Communist Propoganda station. It's crazy!

    --

    Never give up! Never surrender!
  2. WRVA Richmond,Virginia from Toronto by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was picking up a 6000 Watt North Carolina FM station from near Philly

    Today, WRVA, Richmond, Virginia. Crystal clear DX reception in Toronto. On the original made-in-September-1975 Motorola AM radio (with 8-track!) on the dashboard of my 1976 Dodge Ram. Very cool.

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
  3. Natsukashii! by wirefarm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When I was a kid in the early seventies, I used to build radios - Crystal sets and hacked together tube radios from parts in the family attic. One of my lucky finds was a 1950's bakelite shortwave radio - something with 'wave' in its name, I think can't quite remember it now. Had a funky antenna that fit into the top, I remember...
    I got the damn thing working after frequent trips to Radio Shack's free 'Tube Tester' and a lot of experimentation. (Try any tube with the right number of pins... Replace resistors that had gone black - Victory garden walls and all...)
    Got the thing working and my brother and I would stay up late listening to Radio Moscow's propoganda. Brilliant, abstract stuff; The boy scouts were a paramilitary training group and the US govt was making sausage out of Native Americans. The woman who read the news sounded a bit like Natasha from the Bullwinkle cartoons.
    Of course, we always switched over then to Dr. Demento when that came on...
    A couple years ago on an Aeroflot plane to Moscow, I sat next to a former KGB agent and we drank vodka together and talked about how we missed the cold war. I told him about listening to the 'Voice of Moscow' or whatever it was called. We both agreed that international animosity had reached a certain level of respectability and taste with the cold war.
    I asked him if they had the good movies that we did - he called them 'Spymaster' movies, but the ones he told me about only had the west Germans as the opponent - never the Americans, (Too bad. Either he was sparing my feelings, or we weren't as significant as we thought we were... I suspect the former.)

    That was a time that really turned me on to communication and technology. Hearing a voice from so far away on a hunk of wires that I had badly cobbed together from cast-off parts. Hearing that series of tones that helped you tune in to the station before the broadcast.
    I hope right now, some kid is sitting in his room, burning his fingers with a soldering iron over a pile of junk parts, finally hearing a crackle and then a voice.
    I can't imagine a better thrill...

    Cheers,
    Jim (Now far away...)

    --
    -- My Weblog.
  4. Re:short rambling on Natural Radio by ozbird · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They had a URL for some page at NASA in which they have sound files up containing natural radio emissions picked up by satellites *orbiting mars*..

    I couldn't find the Mars link either, but here's some natural radio sounds recorded from Earth and Jupiter. (The INSPIRE page seems to be down.)

  5. Wayyy long distance by Manuka · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember at the peak of the last solar cycle, back in the 80's, there was a radiation storm that knocked out a good chunk of the power grid in Quebec. During that storm, I was receiving FM broadcasts from Germany and the UK. It churned up some pretty kickass Aurora Borealis too.

  6. ISS by The+Original+Atrox · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Wonder what this does to the Internation Space Station. Discovery is currently docked with it, with a Progress resuply vessel on its tail when it leaves. Wonder if they plan for disruptions in communications due to these Solar Flare radations. I can imagine it would play havoc with any transmissions intended to cut right on through the Ionisphere. The station is also about 240 miles up, that makes transmission even more tricky, not only do you have to punch out of our atmosphere, but you gotta be pointing at exactly the right pin-prick point in space... Ohh well, leave it up to nasa to solve. They always do. (Even if they have to jerryrig something).

    -"I know you all. Even if I have never met you." -The Mentor

    --
    -Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master.